British PM visits Ground Zero, students in New York
US: British Prime Minister David Cameron wrapped up his US visit
Thursday by paying homage at the Ground Zero memorial in New York and
chatting with Big Apple university students.
Cameron, who had met in Washington with President Barack Obama on
Wednesday, earlier dropped in on the mayor of Newark, a city near New
York where the mayor is dealing with major budget challenges and reforms
to the schools system.
In New York, Cameron and his wife Samantha paid tribute to the nearly
3,000 people killed on September 11, 2001 when hijacked airliners
destroyed the World Trade Center.
He then did a question-and-answer session with New York University
students, joking that they must be "the most devoted" because they had
come to the event during the Spring break holiday.
Cameron fielded questions on heavyweight issues from the
international field of students, ranging from Iran's nuclear ambitions
to moves in Scotland toward independence from Britain.
While supporting a muscular foreign policy as a close US ally,
Cameron warned against "grand plans and schemes to remake the world."
On the future of the Falkland Islands, where Britain went to war 30
years ago to drive out an Argentine occupying force, Cameron reassured a
woman in the audience that she need not fear a new split in her
household, where her husband is from Argentina. AFP |