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A strategic port is booming yet politically vulnerable

Containers—and containing dissent A strategic port is booming yet politically vulnerable The Economist May 4th 2013 | DJIBOUTI VILLE A RED shipping container is suspended from a crane above a tandoori-hot dock alongside the freighter on which it has just crossed

Containers—and containing dissent

A strategic port is booming yet politically vulnerable

The Economist

May 4th 2013 | DJIBOUTI VILLE

A RED shipping container is suspended from a crane above a tandoori-hot dock alongside the freighter on which it has just crossed the Indian Ocean. Suddenly something goes slightly wrong. The container slips, maybe by a foot: no harm done. Perhaps a mechanical fault is to blame, or a gust of wind that feels like the opening of an oven door. Men in bright vests scurry around the dock in a panic, trying to find the culprit. In Djibouti the port is everything.

No country depends more on a string of jetties than this former French territory on the Red Sea. Other states, such as Singapore and Hong Kong, that also began as ports have diversified in recent decades, but not Djibouti. It lacks the skilled workforce to become a financial-services centre. Yet thanks to three unrelated developments it has turned into an ever more extraordinary transit hub.

First, its backdoor leads to the world’s most populous landlocked country, Ethiopia, home to a fast-growing economy that needs access to the sea. Most of the food, oil and consumer goods imported for Ethiopia’s 83m-plus people passes through Djibouti. Instability in Ethiopia’s eastern neighbour, Somalia, and bad blood with Ethiopia’s other old enemy, Eritrea, mean that Djibouti is the only main transit option. Hence a new railway line to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital, is being built.

At the same time, freighters chugging between Europe and Asia have been seeking an alternative to their traditional halfway stop in Dubai, which involves a detour into the Gulf. Djibouti is more directly en route. In 2009 it spent $400m on a state-of-the-art container terminal, the only one in the region. In the five previous years, trade volume had already doubled and is set to do so again. To expand still more, Djibouti’s port authority is close to securing $4.4 billion from abroad for another five terminals which, it is hoped, will be ready in the next four years.

Third, the woes of Djibouti’s neighbours have brought the world’s most powerful navies to its shores. Piracy in Somalia and anti-terror campaigns on the Arabian peninsula, only 32km (20 miles) away across the water, have created what a new report by Chatham House, a London-based think-tank, calls an “international maritime and military laboratory”.

The United States is the biggest lab rat. Djibouti hosts the only permanent American base in Africa, home to 3,200 people, not all of them naval. Since 2010, American drones have been flying from Camp Lemonnier, beside the main airport, making it the busiest base for drones outside Afghanistan. Some 50 military flights take off every day, including a squadron of F-15E jets, which arrived in 2011. The Pentagon has drawn up plans to spend $1.4 billion to expand the base and triple the number of its special forces there to more than 1,000.

France, the former colonial master, still guarantees Djibouti’s security and keeps 2,000 troops there. The port-state also hosts the biggest military presence of Japan and China outside Asia, both drawn by the fight against Somali piracy. Along with Western countries, they co-operate keenly to protect commercial vessels—though everyone spies on each other. Djibouti also often hosts security-minded delegations from Russia, Iran and India. Even in the cold war, rarely was neutral territory so colourful or crowded.

All this toing and froing has brought Djibouti windfall revenues. President Ismail Omar Guelleh, whose family has been in charge since independence in 1977, dishes out a good slice of it to the country’s small elite, which is gratefully compliant. The rest of the almost 1m inhabitants are among the poorest in Africa, with 60% of them unemployed.

Rattled by the Arab spring and fearing that even minor instability could frighten away foreign military friends and investors, the president has embarked on a carefully staged course of political reform. During legislative elections in February a fifth of the seats were allocated in proportion to votes cast rather than under the previous winner-takes-all system that has long favoured the president’s allies.

Opposition parties were given access to state media and allowed to hold rallies. They won 16 out of 65 seats but then alleged fraud, leading to demonstrations, street clashes with the police and the incarceration of the leading protesters. For the moment, the president’s attempt to create a veneer of democratic respectability has been thwarted. Voters turn out to be trickier to handle than containers.

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53 COMMENTS
  • Hazhaz May 5, 2013

    Mighty Emba wrote, “You just used English language to communicate here but does this make you a slave. As you may know, English is not Ethiopian language.”

    I did not define Eritrea in terms of the English language. English is not the constitutionally protected language in Eritrea. I am not advocating for any alien language to be protected by law at the expense Eritrean languages and identity. If one is ready to burn Eritrean languages, then he is ready to burn anything else. It is not me who is defining Eritrea in terms of Arabic language, it is your likes. Ones you do so, there is no coming back as long as you protect it by law and you deny the kunama, Afar and tigre people to do so.
    It is not me who is ashamed and discouraging others to speak, broadcast and learn in Eritrean languages, it is the people who see themselves as Arab appendix. I will give better credit to the Eritrean regime in this regard than some of the Jebha remnants and people like you.

    below is what Milisha recently wrote which is better,

    ato Belay Nega,
    In your Arab screwed little heads, the issue is not Eritrea but “Tigray” while you are being raped and enslaved. Let the Tigrayan worry about Tigray.
    Is that the reason you want to make Arabic language a legally protected language while the Tigre, Kunama, Afar, Bilin languages are not only denied legal protection in their own homes but also burned down?
    Are you telling me that the “good” Arabs and their servants will be protecting Eritrean languages while Arabic is enjoying a legal constitutional protection outside a none Arab nation?
    Is this what “liberation” means according to Sewra? 30 years of none sense so that a self hating can say Arabic is Eritrea’s language? Arabic language to enjoy everything under Eritrean Sun but native Eritrean languages are discarded like a condom? Call it voluntary Arabization or is it Abeedazation as one Darfuri called it.
    People who disrespect their own and hate themselves voluntarily do not deserve and sovereignty except slavery, no wonder the Arabs are raping and enslaving my own Eritreans.
    There are still many in the opposition who will never accept any educational or radio broadcast except Arabic, talk to me about inferiority laced slaves who want to be more Arab than the Arabs.

    Here is what you will see according to wishes:
    History repeated itself again 28 years later after the second organizational conference of the ELF/Jebha in 1975. Educational books, which were prepared in the Tigré language by teachers at the Sawa training center, were ordered to be burned by the Executive Committee, citing the reason that it was a conspiracy directed against the status and prominence of the Arabic language in Eritrea. The leadership of the ELF gave orders not to prepare any more educational texts in the Tigré language henceforth.

    “ኣብ ፕሮግራም ናይቲ ቀዳማይ ጉባኤ፣ ኣብ ሕቶ ቋንቋታት፣ ትግርኛን ዓረብን ወግዓውያን ቋንቋታት ኮይነን፣ ናይ ኩለን ቋንቋታት ኤርትራ መስልን ማዕርነትን ክሕሎ ዝብል ነጥቢ ነይሩ እዩ። እዚ ነጥቢ’ዚ ድሓር በቶም ዓቃባውያን ወገናት፣ ከም ኣንጻር ዓረብ ዝቐንዐ ውዲት እዩ ተራእዩ። “እዚአን ቋንቋታት ኣይኮናን ዲያለክትስ እየን” ዝብል ምጉት ኣምጺኦም። ከም ውጽኢት ናይዚ ኣመለኻኽታ’ዚ፣ ኩሉ ተጋዳላይ ጀብሃ ከምዝዝከሮ፣ ድሕሪ 2ይ ውድባዊ ጉባኤ፣ ኣብ 1975 ኣብቲ ውድብ ዝነበረ ንመምሃሪ ተባሂሉ ዝተዳለወ ናይ ትግረ መጻሕፍቲ ተቓጺሉ እዩ። ኣብ መዓስከር ሳዋ ዝነበሩ መማህራን፣ ካልኣይ ቋንቋ ናይ ኤርትራ ትግረ’ዩ ብዝብል ገርሃዊ ኣተሓሳስባ እዮም ብትግረ መምሃሪ መጻሕፍቲ ኣዳልዮም። እዚ ምስተሰምዐ፣ ኣብ ኣኼባ ፈጻሚት ሽማግለ ጀብሃ “ናይ ትግረ መጻሕፍቲ ክጸሓፍ የብሉን” ዝብል ውሳነ ሓሊፉ ከምዝቃጸል ተገይሩ። እቲ ውሳነ ኣብ ገለ መራሕቲ ጀብሃ ዝነበረ ናይ መንነት ቅልውላው ዘንጸባርቕ እዩ ነይሩ።” (http://www.ehrea.org/dont_forget_history_01.pdf)

    • MightyEmbasoyra May 5, 2013

      Hazhaz,
      If we decide that our official languages are both Tigrigna and Arabic, what is the problem to you? If the lowland of Eritrea and anyone who choses to use Arabic as a language, I don’t have any issue with that.
      If you haven’t heard it yet, we are independent nation. I am sure you have so many issues in your country and I would advise you to solve yours and leave us alone here.
      I think one of the problems we have now is people like you on the other side of the border.
      This is our problem and it is none of your business. Do you hear me worry about Ethiopia. The answer is no, because it is not of my business at all. I wish you the best as a neighbour but no interest to get in to your business at all.
      Why are you on this board by the way? This is for Eritreans (Anti & pro government).
      Leave us alone.

      • ahmed saleh May 6, 2013

        My hat off , Mighty Embasoyra
        I agree completely , Ethiopian affairs is not our business to interfere . Lets clean our dirt first
        before we sneak in to outsiders issues .
        Hatred , irritability and bitterness in any form among human beings resulted from forgetting God,
        and from the extinguishing of the light of holiness done by own choice and I guess hard to change them.

      • Lauz May 6, 2013

        I wish the language issue was that simple. We’ll create to incompatible entities pulling the nation in two different directions. Why doesn’t Sudan and Ethiopia become one nation? There’s so much emotion involved on the issue, but we have to solve the issue of language and of religion in our politics. We can not push it off to the future any longer.

        Arabic will dominate and kill all our languages including Tigrinya through television, music, tourists and religious institutions. Even as a Tigrinya it is of concern to me. Languages must be nurtured they are not selfsustaining.

        I understand it’s the language of the holy koran and would be a unifying factor for our muslim compatriots, but unify against whom? We are not your adverseries! I would like to see all languages of Eritrea to prosper, language is one of the most important aspects of our Identity. It tells our history and how we are related to each other. Ask any black American, he would wish to be able to say I come from this particular country in Africa and they have this particular food, dance, folklore, language.

        We have so many good things in common. We must try to find a common sense solution, we have been discussing the same thing over and over again for the last 70 years. Madness.

        We have to look 50 years ahead not backwards. Let’s try to stake out a future that benefits all of us. Let’s not get into the politics of religion, we’ve been doing that for the last 500 years. Enough! democracy and separation of state and church/mosque is something we have not tried yet (succesfully).

  • Truly truly i say to you May 5, 2013

    Hazaz you think you can fool easily all Eritreans. But from your writing it is not hard to undestand what your motive it is and what kind of a Tigrian sentiment as you have. I think Mighty embasoira has right, when says, “You just used English language to communicate here but does this make you a slave. As you may know, English is not Ethiopian language.” So i say you too, “Don´t make the Eritrean situation exceptional!” such situation is in all Africa is happened. If you want to blame, blame first the Ethiopians regime for not using the majority Oromo´s language as official, before fingering at Etitrea only.

  • sidiabdu@gmail.com May 5, 2013

    Djibouti’s gain is Eritreans loss. It is too bad, it could have been gain gain for Djibouti and Eritrea if the brick head would leave the governance to competent Eritrean technocrats. I am pretty sure sure they could do a thousand times better. So far what we got from him is misery,more poverty and a laughing stock of the world.Hello, the writing is on the wall. Can’t you read? Eritreans are voting on their foot and falling prey to the bastards in the Arabian Desert. What didn’t you get?

  • NEW HOPE ERITREA May 5, 2013

    Dadi,

    I was ready to ¨give you a piece of my comment¨..until you modified your opinion by adding a very important & true clause…¨prticularly TIGRINYA speaking people.You hit the nail on the head..by the way I am of the ¨Hizbe Tigrinya¨stock..and I always wonder..We the Hizbe Tigrinya struggled to loose our Tigrean identity & we are prohibitting our Metahit brothers from doing the same.Actually they are not asking to anything new ,things were same during Janhoy´s era..Newspaper ..HIBRET..was published in Tigrinya & Amharic.
    I think all Eritrea should say we are originally from JAPAN..we do not like Singapor anymore.
    The whole country is going loco.

  • ማሊሻ May 5, 2013

    Truly said: “Don´t make the Eritrean situation exceptional!”

    The Eritrean situation is truly exceptional because it is only in Eritrea that some Eritreans burned their own indigenous language, in this case Tigre, to promote Arabic.

    MightyEmbasoyra wrote, “You just used English language to communicate here but does this make you a slave. As you may know, English is not Ethiopian language.”

    Isn’t Eritrean politics strange, whenever an Eritrean is cornered and can not challenge anything, the person with opposing views is a called “weyane, tigrayan, ethiopian or racist …”
    This is how “Truly”, in his untruly state is acting. This will make the Higdefites better than some of the would be oppositions. As far as I know, Hazhaz is not Ethiopian.
    In this case, Hazhaz is right. Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Egypt, China use a lot of English language but none of them use it as their legal language as some Eritrean slaves or Abeeds want the Arabic language to be used in Eritrea. None of these nations use any foreign language to replace their own languages or to burn their own languages as the Jabha left overs did.
    Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, Egypt or China did not prevent their own languages from being used in schools, radio, tv or the courts and to replace it with an alien language, again as some Eritrea Arab slaves want it to do by burning Eritrean languages such as Tigre, Kunama, Afar. It is true the Jabha leadership burned Eritrean text books written in Tigre to give priority to Arabic language.
    As Hazhaz said, in this case, with all its weaknesses and bad human right records, the Eritrean regime even did not stoop to this level as some of the Arab slavish mentality did that is common in the opposition.
    In Eritrea the most popular current local radio program is in Tigre broadcast on Sundays, called Sembet Abay and their Saturday entertainment programs.
    There is even a daily Bilen broadcast as there are in many other languages. On Saturdays, the Bilen program invites guests and the listeners ask phone in questions to lawyers, doctors, psychologists, teachers, elders, sociologists … who speak Bilen language.
    In your little Arab slaved brain this will not be possible. Here, the undemocratic Issaias afewerki beats most of the slavish opposition who hate their own languages so much that they want to burn it or had already burned it down.

  • SpadeISspade May 6, 2013

    Djibouti is smart, unlike the over inflated and stupid shabiya. Wedi sebeiti z’kone seb’ay z’feterelna s’kayn hasem’n ember wala hanti z’rekebnayo neger yelen. K’ndey eba meswaati tekefilu only to lose what we intended to gain. you pay sacrifice in order (at the end) to gain and safe guard your gain – interest. but what did this ebud se’bay deliver IN THE END?

  • Tes May 6, 2013

    what is wrong with my Eritreans fellow country men. This article is bout the lost Economic opportunities. It is none-thing to do with language which one we need to use as national language that can be discussed within the interest of the nation for another day. We need to stop and think than repeating the same mistake again and again. Based in this article rather than pointing finger at each other or outsiders we need to seek and find out where we got it wrong and learn from our mistakes. We are in 21st century and we need to think and act like we are in this advance era rather than like cave man mentality. We need to stop blaming others or dig deep to create enemies and spearing hate and mistrust among us. When someone differ from our school of though we need to accommodate him/her rather than jumping up and down and trying to intimidate them as outsiders and look at them with suspicion. The ones who support the evil tyrant in Eritrea stop long ago to argue rising facts they simply divert to filthy name calling what I am talking is to those who oppose the dictator to use same attacking line as those who support the despot. This type of arguing among ourselves is no helping our case.

    The bottom line is we Eritrean are the losers from the regional economic advance and we need to concentrate on solution one at a time rather than bring other thing in to one pot to confuse and lose our direction.

  • jose May 6, 2013

    “””” “different” from their Ethiopian cousins and Africans”””. Eritreans have achieved that by becoming the only country in the world that has an economy fully dependent on Human Organ export.

  • kabbire May 6, 2013

    A certain ismail Omer-ali writes in awate site with a title, “Yosief’s circular journey in search of Ethiopia”

    And a reader responds with tongue in cheek:

    “The proper title of the article should have been:

    ‘Ghedli’s Circular Journey In Search of Arabs’

    Aren’t we who are burning Eritrea’s languages to walk, talk and pretend as our Arab masters who really do not respect us?”

    Mengistu who used to insult Jebha- Shaebia as “korakur Arab, kedemti nay Gibtsi, barayu Arab” ከደምቲ ናይ ዓረብ ባራዩ ናይ ግብጺ ኮራኩር ዓረብ must be laughing and chuckling to see Eritreans being sold as Arab slaves in Egypt and Sudan; used by the camel-herding-savage Arab’s as sex slaves and the poor Eritreans organs harvested for the sick Arab’s kidney and cornea spare parts, and as human land mine sweepers by the Arabs in Libya, and as indentured farm laborers in Yemen .
    But still Mengistu is not smart enough because he failed to predict that the savage Arabs also charge the family of each of the enslaved Eritreans US $35,000 dollars for their freedom from the Arab’s slavery. This will certainly make Mengistu a bit of a lazy thinker.

  • kabbire May 6, 2013

    መንግስቱ ሃይለማርያም ኣብ እርጋኑን ስደቱን ናይ ዚምባብወ ብዙሕ ይስሕቕ ይህሉ ይኸውን። ምኽንያቱስ እቲ ቐደም ኣብ መደርኡ ኣንጻር ጀብሃን ሻዕብያን ክጻረፍ እንከሎ
    ከደምቲ ናይ ዓረብ ፣ ባራዩ ናይ ግብጺ ፣ ኮራኩር ዓረብ ፣ ሽዩጣት ፔትሮ ዶላር
    ይብል ኔሩ።
    ኤርትራውያን ውን በቲ ዕሸል ዘይበሰለ ኣእምሮና ንስሕቆን ንጻረፎን ነበርና።

    ሕጂ ኾይኑ ግና ኣዋልድናን ኣወዳትናን በቶም ጨካናት ዓረብ ናይ ግብጽን ሱዳንን ይዕመጻን ይግፍዓን ኣለዋ። ከም ጤል በጊዕ ይሽየጡ ፣ ብዝረሰነ ሓዊ ብዝመኸኸ ፕላስቲክ ይትኮሱ፣ ኣጻብዖም ይቑረጽ ፣ ኤርትራውያን ደቓሉ ዓረብ ይወልዳ ። ኤርትራውያን ወለዲ ድማ ደቆም ኣሕዋቶም ከም ገለ ኢሎም ብሂወት እንተተርፉ ኢሎም፣ ካብ ዘይብሎም ዓሰርተታት ኣሽሓት ዶላር ክእክቡ ሓሰረ መከራ ይጸግቡ።
    ኣየ መንግስቱ ዕደ ለካ ሓደ ሓደ ግዜስ ካባና ይሓይሽን የስተውዕልን ኔሩ እዩ።

    የተከበሩ ጓድ መንግስቱ ሃይለማርያም ፣ በጀብሃና ሻእብያ ፕሮፖጋንዳ ጭንቅላቴ ተምርዞ እርሶን በመስደቤ ይቅርታ ኣድርጉልኝ። ድሮ፣ የኣርቦች ባርያ የግብጾች ኣሽከር ሲሉ፣ እንዲሁ በኣረብ ኣገር ወንድሞቼና እህቶቼ በባርያነት እንደ እቃ ይለወጣሉ ብየ ብህልሜም ኣስቤ ኣላቅምና።

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