Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar Posted July 24, 2018 We will see if Afwerki will allow his port to be sabotaged as Imaaraadka's ultimate plan is. Or if he will give out the majority of port's shares to DP. Time will tell dhoolacadeyntaan wixii ka dambeeyo. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tallaabo Posted July 24, 2018 1 hour ago, cadnaan1 said: UAE is just doing dirty work for America, this cold war is between America and China the Chinese have invested alot of money on the new port dooraale and new railway they will loose lot of money. Absolutely. The Americans have an enormous soft power and dirty tricks in their cowboy hats which the dictator of Jabuuti under-estimated. Not only Djibouti but I think the whole of Africa will be a cold war battle ground once Trump is out of office and a more capable president takes over. The west will never let Africa join the Chinese sphere of influence. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Xaaji Xunjuf Posted July 24, 2018 Hillary Clinton once said the power for influences between the USA and Chinese will be Africa that's the battle ground. Eritrea has been under sanctions Isiolated the late Meles created the sanca axis back in the salty 2000s. To strangle Eritrea. It was a deep conflict between the tigrinya tigrians. Over influences ended up isias backing maxakiim very foolishly move. Which led to the sanctions by the state department. But after Meles his death things got better for the Eritreans. Eritrea needs cash it has a very young population half of them conscripted by isiais afewerki. Isias for a long time hated. He hated the US empire and the very fact why the usa and israelis are so deep in Ethiopia but he needs a break for a long period of time he had flirted with the Iranians the russians there were rumors he wanted to lease some islands to the iranians. But during the golf crisis he picked a side and he choose it safe he will allow the Emirates to invest and build ports massawa and assab and it's time to cash in. Inbadanbay haraadnayaeen Eritreanku Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
maakhiri1 Posted July 24, 2018 IOM will be fine and done good for his people, but this is obvious,Arabs feel humiliated by Dp world saga, and this is revenge. Ha u biqin, this is a game, and Arabs will lose at the end. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ifiye Posted July 24, 2018 The UAE is scrambling to control ports in Africa But it faces rivals from Qatar to China Print edition | Middle East and Africa Jul 19th 2018| ABU DHABI AND DUBAI IT SEEMED an irrational decision 20 years ago. DP World is one of the world’s largest 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 1990s it started making surprisingly big investments in the Horn of Africa. It built a large port in Djibouti, and is now working on another in Somaliland (see map). The combined GDP of the two African entities is smaller than that of Moldova. Yet the firm sees the region as a land of opportunity. So do the rulers of United Arab Emirates (UAE), one of whose components, Dubai, owns a majority stake in DP World. 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 exacerbating tensions in the region. Executives at DP World argue that Africa 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 105m people rely on Djibouti for 95% of their trade. Farther inland, 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 of Africa is short of ports. It’s stifling,” says one executive. The firm’s first foray was on Djibouti’s coast. When DP World won its first concessions there in the 1990s, 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 revenue. It runs at nearly full capacity, handling 800,000 containers a year. Much of its cargo travels along a Chinese-built railway from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital. Djibouti’s profile rose further after the terrorist attacks on America of September 11th, 2001, when America opened a military base there. France and China also have bases; other navies patrol off its coast to deter Somali pirates. But when the Emiratis wanted to open their own naval base they were rebuffed, partly because of their close ties to 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 UAE also helped mediate Eritrea’s peace deal with Ethiopia signed on July 9th, ending decades of hot and cold war. If it holds, the truce could end UN sanctions and open Eritrea to investment. Assab and another port, Massawa, could be expanded. In 2016 DP World won a 30-year concession to operate the port of Berbera in Somaliland, which declared independence in 1991 (though no foreign government recognises it). Critics said the deal would hasten the break-up of Somalia. Djibouti was upset for different reasons. With a planned capacity of 1.25m containers, Berbera 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 millions 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: 4.8m barrels of oil passed through it every day in 2016. Competition is getting fierce, though. Qatar and its ally, Turkey, are building ports in Sudan. Saudi Arabia is in talks to set up a naval base in Djibouti. All three Gulf states are trying to snap up farmland in east Africa, part of a broader effort to secure food supplies for their arid countries. Emirati-built ports could one day export crops from Emirati-owned farms. As the Gulf states move in, however, they bring their own conflicts to a troubled region. Qatar helped to end the clashes between Djibouti and Eritrea and kept peacekeepers there for almost a decade. Then came the bust-up of 2017, when four Arab states, including the UAE, imposed an embargo on Qatar. Both Djibouti and Eritrea sided with the blockading states. Qatar pulled out its troops, and Eritrea soon seized the disputed territory from Djibouti. Gulf states could also find themselves in competition with China. The UAE hopes to be part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, a scheme to invest hundreds of billions of dollars in infrastructure such as roads and ports. Jebel Ali is the busiest port outside Asia, and already acts as a hub for trade with Africa. But China may want to cut out the middleman. In 2014 Djibouti tried to toss out DP World. It accused the firm of paying bribes to secure its Doraleh concession. Arbitrators in London found the claim meritless. In February Djibouti dropped the legal niceties: it simply seized the port. The government says DP World failed to expand the port as quickly as promised. Shippers believe it took Doraleh as a sop to China, to which it is heavily indebted (see article). In July Djibouti opened the first phase of a new $3.5bn free-trade zone, set to be the largest in Africa when it is finished. Built mostly by state-owned Chinese firms, it sits next to Doraleh. DP World says the project violates the terms of its concession and is threatening to sue. The UAE helped to put Djibouti on the map. Now, ironically, it may find itself frozen out. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
maakhiri1 Posted July 24, 2018 51 minutes ago, Barwaaqo said: Walaalo Soomaaliya adigu in soo noqoto ma u duceeysay?Dagaalkan carabi iyo Xabash Soomaali ku hayso ma dareentay! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
maakhiri1 Posted July 24, 2018 SL walaalka nin loo xiirayow adna soo qoyso, Habeenkii cashadaas Abu Dhabi u dhigtey $50 million ka badan, baryadii SL $50 million ku heleen, halka Ethiopia and Eritrea wax yar gudahood $$billions la siiyey. Carabi lacagteeda iyadaa leh cidii rabtona xor u ah in ay siiso, hadana maqaamka ka joogtid ogoow. This is writing on the wall, smell the coffee for Slers, we can only stand and survive united and believe asaageen iska dhicin, No more petty politics. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ifiye Posted July 24, 2018 Koox walbo oo Soomaali ah oo dan reer kadoorbido danta guud ee Soomaaliyeed saasaa udambeeyso. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Old_Observer Posted July 24, 2018 If UAE does not find and hire Somaalis against Djibouti, Djibouti will be fine. He should contribute to stability in Somali and Afar kilils in Ethiopia with joint farms, giving the right to do business as Djibouti citizens for selected folks from both Kilils. Eritrea is lost cause. Eritrea has changed more masters than any other place in the horn of Africa. Persians, Ottomans, Egyptians, Italians, British and Ethiopia. The place never learns from history. They forget that empires come and go, but a neighbor a brother will be there long after empires are gone and new ones arrive. Eritrea is acting as if UAE and Saudi may never split, but will happen sooner than one realizes. Ghelleh just stay low and speed up economic works. Its very easy for your opponents to find unemployed youth, an article on NYT, few words from State Department officials...and you could be history for democracy human rights even faith since Wahabi are in alliance with your opponents. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Barwaaqo Posted July 24, 2018 44 minutes ago, maakhiri1 said: Walaalo Soomaaliya adigu in soo noqoto ma u duceeysay?Dagaalkan carabi iyo Xabash Soomaali ku hayso ma dareentay! Haa Somalia waan u duceeyaa oo Waxaan ugu duceeyaa Allow xaqa tus oo kuwa awrkoodda ku kacsanaya ee kaare Ethopian iyo Kukuuyo ku qabsanaya ka qabo, dhamaantoodna danahoodda iyo dalkoodda ku hanuuni. Allow shanta madaxweyne ee is barbar orda ka qabo oo u samee Madaxweyne keliya. 1 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ifiye Posted July 24, 2018 15 minutes ago, Barwaaqo said: Haa Somalia waan u duceeyaa oo Waxaan ugu duceeyaa Allow xaqa tus oo kuwa awrkoodda ku kacsanaya ee kaare Ethopian iyo Kukuuyo ku qabsanaya ka qabo, dhamaantoodna danahoodda iyo dalkoodda ku hanuuni. Allow shanta madaxweyne ee is barbar orda ka qabo oo u samee Madaxweyne keliya. Barwaaqo waa gabar caqli badan. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Old_Observer Posted July 24, 2018 5 hours ago, maakhiri1 said: IOM will be fine and done good for his people, but this is obvious,Arabs feel humiliated by Dp world saga, and this is revenge. Ha u biqin, this is a game, and Arabs will lose at the end. Arabs don't even have autonomy let alone independent strategy. That is why when Arabs become friends they hug too much and when they quarrel they fight too much, make it look like end of the world. Soon Qatar and Saudi will repair some of the damage and UAE will be distant. UAE and Qatar are deadly enemies because are in competition in everything. Ports, energy, real estate investment in Europe and America....everything. Next 6 months to a year will know if America tells them to ease off in the horn of Africa. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Holac Posted July 25, 2018 On 07/24/2018 at 8:59 AM, Tallaabo said: "Jesus clan" it shall be Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Duufaan Posted July 25, 2018 It is just a political game. In reality, there will not be no substantial change. Overall I am optimistic for the people in region. They have more to gain with new cold war. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites