The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1
The EconomistJuly 21 st 2018 33

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TSEEMED an irrational decision 20 years
ago. DP World is one of the world’s larg-
est maritime firms. From a squat office
overlooking Dubai’s bustling Jebel Ali
port it directs operations in 40 countries.
Most are in busy shipping hubs such as
London and Rotterdam. But in the 1990 s it
started making surprisingly big invest-
ments in the Horn of Africa. It built a large
portin Djibouti and isnowworkingon an-
other in Somaliland (see map). The com-
bined GDP of the two African entities is
smaller than that of Moldova. Yet the firm
sees the region as a land ofopportunity.
So do the rulers of United Arab Emir-
ates ( UAE) one ofwhose components Du-
bai owns a majoritystake in DPWorld. It is
one of several Gulf states trying to gain a
strategic foothold in east Africa through
ports. Controlling these offers commercial
and military advantages but risks exacer-
batingtensions in the region.
Executives at DP World argue that Afri-
ca needs many more ports—especially in
the Horn where conflict has stifled trade.
Ethiopia populous and fast-growing lost
its coastline when Eritrea broke away in
1991. Its 1 05m people rely on Djibouti for
95 % oftheirtrade. Fartherinland countries
such as South Sudan Uganda and Rwanda
struggle to reach markets. DP World thinks
the region from Sudan to Somalia needs
10 - 12 ports. It has just half that. “The whole
Horn ofAfrica isshortofports. It’sstifling”

Djibouti’s profile rose further after the
terrorist attacks on America of September
11 th 2001 when America opened a mili-
tary base there. France and China also
have bases; other navies patrol off its coast
to deter Somali pirates. But when the Emi-
ratis wanted to open their own naval base
they were rebuffed partly because of their
close tiesto Djibouti’s rival Eritrea (the two
states had a bloody border dispute in
2008 ). In 2015 the UAE started building a
naval base in Assab in southern Eritrea.
The base has been used in the Saudi-led
war against Houthi rebels in Yemen. It
would be the jumping-off point for a
mooted amphibious assault on Hodeida
Yemen’s main port now the focus of
heavy fighting. The UAEalso helped medi-
ate Eritrea’s peace deal with Ethiopia
signed on July 9 th ending decades of hot
and cold war. If it holds the truce could
end UN sanctions and open Eritrea to in-
vestment. Assab and another port Massa-
wa could be expanded.
In 2016 DP World won a 30 - year conces-
sion to operate the port of Berbera in So-
maliland which declared independence
in 1991 (though no foreign government re-
cognises it). Critics said the deal would
hasten the break-up of Somalia. Djibouti
was upset for different reasons. With a
planned capacity of 1. 25 m containers Ber-
bera would erode Djibouti’s monopoly on
Ethiopian cargo. Indeed Ethiopia acquired
a 19 % stake in the port earlier this year. All
this could cost Djibouti hundreds of mil-
lions in annual transit fees.
It would also cement the UAE’s place in
a strategic region. Uniquely among Arab
states it tries to project military power far
beyond its borders. The Horn ports all sit
near the Bab al-Mandab strait a vital
choke-point at the mouth of the Red Sea:
4. 8 m barrels of oil passed through it every

says one executive.
The firm’s first foray was on Djibouti’s
coast. When DP World won its first conces-
sions there in the 1990 s the Emiratis were
among the few investors interested in the
small and poor former French colony. DP
World built and operated a new container
terminal Doraleh and helped finance
roads and other infrastructure. Doraleh is
now the country’s largest employer and
the government’s biggest source of rev-
enue. It runs at nearly full capacity han-
dling 800 000 containers a year. Much of
its cargo travels along a Chinese-built rail-
way from Addis Ababa Ethiopia’s capital.

Red Sea scramble

Ports in the Horn


ABU DHABI AND DUBAI
Shipping gives the United Arab Emirates ( UAE) a foothold in east Africa. But it also
draws rivals from Qatarto China

Middle East and Africa


Also in this section

34 Djibouti’s entanglement with China

34 Turkey in Syria

35 Morocco’s new friends
35 Infertility in Nigeria

36 Slavery in Mauritania

SAUDI ARABIA

SOMALILAND

ETHIOPIA

DJIBOUTI

SOMALIA

ERITREA

SUDAN

KUWAIT

IRAN

IRAQ

YEMEN

QATAR

BAHRAIN

OMAN

UAE

I N D I A N
O C E A N

The
Gulf

Red
Sea

Gulf of Aden

Dubai

Doraleh Berbera

Hodeida

Jebel Ali

Assab

Massawa

Abu Dhabi

Addis Ababa

Bab al-Mandab
strait

500 km
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