View Full Version : Djibouti: St Tropez in the Horn?


Xusein
March 21st, 2008, 08:00 AM
Interesting article about Djibouti, a tiny country in truly a tough location, from the economist.

Link: http://www.economist.com/world/africa/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10881652


Djibouti: St Tropez in the Horn?

http://img85.imageshack.us/img85/8338/cma931cn8.gif

Mar 19th 2008 | DJIBOUTI
From The Economist print edition
A tiny country makes the best of a bad neighbourhood

IN THE centre of the blazing whiteness, four Afar herdsmen chip away at the salt with pickaxes. The milk-green waters beyond the salt pans look almost glacial, but the burning hot wind, the camels and dizzying mirages dispel the illusion. This is Lake Assal. At 155 metres (509 feet) below sea-level, it is Africa's lowest point—and one of its hottest. The Afars (sometimes known as the Danakil) gather the salt into sacks. They used to carry the salt on camels west into the Ethiopian highlands but times have changed. These Afars sell it for $7 a sack in Djibouti town, a couple of hours' drive away.

The road there winds across black lava fields and moonscapes, past a hilltop garrison of the French Foreign Legion, down dry river beds to the azure Gulf of Tadjoura. The capital's outskirts look unpromising but as you get closer to Djibouti Ville—the city itself—an unexpected order asserts itself. Even locals admit that, until recently, the tiny country, with a mere 800,000 people, was asleep. Now, against the odds, it is stirring.

Until recently, it relied almost entirely on French largesse. When independence came, in 1977, the founding president, Hassan Gouled, fretted about what would happen if the colonialists left. But Djibouti (formerly called the French Territory of the Afars and the Issas) is still France's largest foreign base, hosting a force 2,600-strong. It deters the statelet's much bigger, predatory neighbours from even thinking of invading. (Earlier this year, France and the United Arab Emirates signed a deal to let France set up a military base in Abu Dhabi, the largest of the seven emirates.)

After independence, Djibouti's two ethnic groups, the Issas (who are ethnic Somalis) and the Afars drifted into Djibouti city. Most swapped a nomadic life of herding goats and cattle for long heat-haze afternoons chewing qat, a narcotic leaf flown in from Ethiopia. But things began to change when Eritrean independence cut Ethiopia off from the sea. Since then, almost all Ethiopia's trade has been shipped through Djibouti, some of it on a rickety railway linking it to Addis Ababa. The bullish—some say bullying—thinking of Djibouti's current president, Ismail Guelleh, a protégé and nephew of Mr Gouled first elected in 1999, has also helped pep things up. His slogan on billboards throughout the town is “Nous croyons” (We believe).

In what? Well, in Dubai. He wants Djibouti to follow the example of the booming gulf emirate or perhaps even of Malaysia, a Muslim model where many children of Djibouti's elite head for university. Dubai Ports now runs Djibouti's upgraded port. The economy may grow by nearly 6% this year, though unemployment is high and the IMF is unhappy with the government's shoddy fiscal management. Businessmen say the port's improvements make it hard to imagine that Eritrea's Massawa, Somaliland's Berbera or Somalia's Bossaso will catch up soon. Some talk of turning the city's scorching seafront into “St Tropez in the Horn”.

There is also a spectacular plan said to have the backing of Tarek bin Laden, a half-brother of Osama bin Laden, to build the world's longest bridge, across the Bab al-Mandib (Gate of Sorrows), the strait between Djibouti and Yemen. Even for ambitious Djibouti, this may be a bridge too far, judging by local scepticism and the developers' evasiveness.

But the country may profit from its new strategic importance. Mr Guelleh let America set up a large military base, from which it conducts anti-terrorist operations across east Africa. Ruthless policing and foreign troops have so far stopped Islamist militants from getting a foothold there, although there are complaints that Mr Guelleh is increasingly undemocratic.

Mr Guelleh's main aim is not to annoy any government in the region. Relations with Ethiopia are tense but practical. Mr Guelleh opposed Ethiopia's invasion of Somalia in late 2006 but avoids the topic when meeting Ethiopian officials. Djibouti's people resent the advertisements along their roads in Amharic, Ethiopia's main language. But grumbling is quickly silenced by Ethiopian threats to cut off qat imports. Djibouti is similarly cautious with Somalia. Mr Guelleh is disappointed by the feebleness of Somalia's transitional government but does not endorse neighbouring Somaliland's bid for independence. In sum, Djibouti is surviving cannily in a tough neighbourhood.

Xusein
March 21st, 2008, 08:06 AM
http://www.sabanews.net/upload/thumbs/080224174119-26836-0.jpg

^^ This is a rendering of the bridge to Yemen that the article mentions.

It will be 28.5 Km long, and has a cost of €14 billion.
This is by far the largest private project in Djibouti's (Yemen too) history.

Here is an older news article, from BBC.
I'm guessing that the $70 billion was an overestimate or something. :dunno:

Either way, this is great news not only for Djibouti and Yemen, but the greater Horn of Africa and Arabia as well.

Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7259427.stm


Tarek Bin Laden's Red Sea bridge

A company owned by Osama Bin Laden's half-brother has proposed building a bridge across Mandab Strait on the Red Sea, to link Djibouti to Yemen.

Tarek Bin Laden Construction is negotiating with the two governments about plans for the 28.5km bridge - one of the longest in the world.

The proposed bridge would carry a six-lane motorway and a railway.

Apart from the $70bn cost, critics have pointed out that the project would be sited in an earthquake zone.

New cities would be built at either end of the bridge.

Tarek Bin Laden has spent time lobbying politicians in Djibouti and Yemen to accept his proposal to build the bridge across the Mandab Strait, from Djibouti to Yemen's Perim Island, which is the narrowest stretch of sea between the two countries.

The Yemenis are convinced the project will be carried out with Saudi and Emirates funds to connect the Arab world to Africa

"The project fell on us from the sky with the proposal by Osama Bin Laden's brother, who has a construction company in Saudi Arabia," Mr Dieita said.

"People are talking about it a lot here - the Yemenis are convinced the project will be carried out with Saudi and Emirates' funds to connect the Arab world to Africa."

The new town in Djibouti would be called the City of Light.

"Numerous American, Yemeni and even French businesses are taking part in the project," the prime minister said.

"But the big advantage will be to take millions of African Muslims to Mecca, by train or by bus".

But the bridge would not only benefit pilgrims - hundreds of African migrants drown each year trying to reach Yemen from Djibouti's neighbour, Somalia.

If the bridge were ever constructed, it would be among the world's longest.

The longest existing cross-sea bridge is the 32-km Donghai Bridge in China.

Xusein
March 21st, 2008, 08:16 AM
I've been to Djibouti before.

To be honest, it was kind of sleepy. I was in transit and landed in the airport in the afternoon, aka, the chewing time. The city shuts down at like 3PM, and it's blisteringly hot. But, to hear all the plans going on (and the DP World buyout of the port) makes me happy that they are diversifying their economy and finally taking advantage of their relative location in a way that does not involve the French military. It's going to be a booming place in a couple of years.

I hope for the best for my brothers! :okay:

African Lion
March 21st, 2008, 08:32 AM
Djibouti's people resent the advertisements along their roads in Amharic, Ethiopia's main language. But grumbling is quickly silenced by Ethiopian threats to cut off qat imports

:lol::lol: That gave me a good laugh. Shut up or we will stop the chat.

The bridge is a bad idea. A good fairy system can do the job without having to spend 10s of billions of dollars for a bridge in a poor region of the earth. I get the main idea, but the region needs growth and stability before this can seriously be thought of. 10 rot, can you imagine all the wahabi's coming over from the Gulf states:lol:, The horn is bad enough.

I don't know about being St Tropez but big ups to Djibouti.

Xusein
March 21st, 2008, 08:45 AM
Cut it off...let them spend their money on more important things, lol.

I wouldn't be surprised if qat (that's what us Somalis call it) was Djibouti's main import, after food. :lol:

Anyway, I disagree about the bridge. Although it's somewhat unrealistic, it shows that foreigners actually care about Djibouti for once, for purposes that have nothing to do with defense. Unlike it's neighbors, Djibouti is stable. It just has lacked foreign investment for most of it's history. Because of that, it was stagnant for the longest time...even being able to be the single port for all of Ethiopia isn't enough to help it develop.

The Gulf of Aden has the shittiest ferry system in the world. I'm sure that you have heard of all the deaths of the Somalis and Ethiopians who try to cross the Gulf, totally disastrous. Plus, a ferry system would possibly involve "Somalia", and that's a place that no foreign investor wants to touch with a 50-foot pole.

A bridge would help people actually get there without risking their lives, and would press the countries to build on their infrastructure more...imagine being able to ride a rail from Addis Ababa to Yemen? And it's the project to bring more stuff to Djibouti...it's a domino effect.

As for the Wahabbis...we already have them anyway. :ohno:

SA BOY
March 23rd, 2008, 04:07 PM
Djiboiuti being compared to St Tropez, scuse me while I pick myself up off the floor

Matthias Offodile
March 26th, 2008, 12:03 AM
Interesting report, I have just read it! Djibouti just has 800 000 inhabitants, I thought it was more

Xusein
March 26th, 2008, 08:55 PM
^^ Yeah, it's small.
It's also about 83% urban, making it one of the most urbanized countries in Africa.

Pretty much everyone lives in Djibouti city.

Djiboiuti being compared to St Tropez, scuse me while I pick myself up off the floor

It was not literal. ;)

skipperBill
March 28th, 2008, 12:03 AM
Yeah that bridge project is an amazing prospect!
I actually posted this in the Eastern Africa Developement thread: right here (http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showpost.php?p=18144529&postcount=353)

It will cause a great boom in economic development from the Jeddah region
to Yemen, Djibouti, Ethiopia, and even Somalia, Kenya, and Sudan to an extent.

Im happy for Djibouti. :banana::banana:

skipperBill
May 29th, 2008, 05:45 PM
here is something else I found, it looks like Djbouti and Yemen have found a source of funding (a Bin Laden brother) and construction may actually be in sight for the near future :cheers: :


Bin Laden brother aims to bridge Red Sea

ADEN, Yemen — Nobody has walked across the Red Sea since Moses parted the waters. But it could happen again under an audacious plan to build the world's longest suspension bridge between Africa and the Arabian peninsula.

If built, the bridge would cross the Red Sea at an 18-mile-wide strait known as the Bab al-Mandeb, or Gate of Tears, connecting the southern tip of Yemen with the tiny east African country of Djibouti. Estimated price tag: $10 billion to $20 billion.

http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080528/NEWS/805280335

skipperBill
May 31st, 2008, 11:14 PM
here is one more article I found on Djibouti:

Investors in tiny Djibouti are thinking big
Djibouti is becoming the little country of big dreams. Hundreds of millions of dollars of overseas investment are pouring in, promising to turn this sleepy, sweltering ministate, which does not even have a stoplight, into something of an African trade center.

There are gold miners from India, geothermal experts from Iceland, Turkish hotel managers, Saudi oil engineers, French bankers and American military contractors. Tycoons from Dubai are pumping in a billion dollars just on their own, largely for the country's all-important port, a gateway to the region. There is even a project on paper to build a multibillion-dollar, 28-kilometer, or 18-mile, bridge across the Red Sea, captained by Tarek bin Laden, the half-brother Osama bin Laden.

http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/05/30/africa/horn.php?page=1

Xusein
June 2nd, 2008, 07:05 AM
Great articles! :cheer:

Ras Siyan
July 23rd, 2010, 01:20 PM
WOW! Just came across this, nice articles...Go Djibouti, we can make it!

Ras Siyan
July 23rd, 2010, 01:25 PM
Interesting article about Djibouti, a tiny country in truly a tough location, from the economist.

Link: http://www.economist.com/world/africa/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10881652

Thanks for the wonderful article. I read it before, but I just noticed the part about Djiboutian students heading to Malaysia for their university studies. That's funny, coz I'm one of those.

Yoniii
July 24th, 2010, 02:58 PM
Can women run around in tight little bikinis on Djibouti's beaches and poor champaign down their throat? If not - don't compare it to St. Tropez. :D

Did they cancel the bridge project? I haven't heard anything new in a while..

Ras Siyan
July 24th, 2010, 05:46 PM
Can women run around in tight little bikinis on Djibouti's beaches and poor champaign down their throat? If not - don't compare it to St. Tropez. :D


Yes they can Yonii, Djibouti isn't that conservative. But I think they should encourage Islamic Hotels (like those in Turkey) to attract a more diverse clentele. Islamic Hotels are just like conventional ones, they don't serve alcohol and have a private swiming pool for women.
I really feel the current hotels and resorts are meant to attract mainly westerners. They are now promoting tourism from Gulf States, more tourists mainly from the UAE are coming in. They deserve to enjoy their Djibouti stay too. Anyway, lets hope we really unleash our potential in tourism, for a little and beautiful country like ours, it could create thousands of jobs and help reduce unemployment, thus poverty.

hsark
July 25th, 2010, 07:47 PM
€14 billion for a bridge !!!!

Xusein
July 26th, 2010, 06:10 AM
Did they cancel the bridge project? I haven't heard anything new in a while..

Neither have I, starting to get a bit concerned because this project could really put Djibouti on the map.

And it would really benefit the region as a whole.

Xusein
July 26th, 2010, 06:18 AM
Yes they can Yonii, Djibouti isn't that conservative. But I think they should encourage Islamic Hotels (like those in Turkey) to attract a more diverse clentele. Islamic Hotels are just like conventional ones, they don't serve alcohol and have a private swiming pool for women.
I really feel the current hotels and resorts are meant to attract mainly westerners. They are now promoting tourism from Gulf States, more tourists mainly from the UAE are coming in. They deserve to enjoy their Djibouti stay too. Anyway, lets hope we really unleash our potential in tourism, for a little and beautiful country like ours, it could create thousands of jobs and help reduce unemployment, thus poverty.

Speaking of tourism, I think Djibouti should market it's landscape more. The desert lands and mountainous areas north of Djibouti City are very amazing, and areas like Lac Assal are almost out of this world. I would love to just take an off-road vehicle and just drive it down!