Posted on 04/14/2016 7:18:24 AM PDT by george76
Everyone wants a piece of Djibouti. Its all about the bases.
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the New Jersey-sized nation. Yet its quiet stability within the volatile Horn of Africa has made the country of just 875,000 people a hub for the worlds superpowers.
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The stars and stripes flutters alongside the runway where military and passenger planes touch down: Camp Lemmonier, Americas only permanent military base in Africa, hosts 4,500 troops and contractors who conduct missions against al-Qaeda in Yemen and al-Shabab in Somalia. The outpost, leased for $60m a year, shares an airstrip with the international airport,
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Djibouti also hosts Frances largest military presence abroad (it still has an agreement to defend its former colony); Japans only foreign base anywhere; and Spanish and German soldiers from the EUs anti-piracy force, who are billeted at the fancy Kempinski and Sheraton hotels. The Saudis and Indians are also rumoured to be interested in establishing outposts, as are the Russians.
Meanwhile, China is building its first overseas base anywhere in the world in Djibouti, for which it will pay a more modest $20m in rent annually.
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The ports account for a whopping 70% of GDP, but only provide a few thousand jobs. The UN puts unemployment at 60%, though Mr Dawaleh claims it is half that (Djiboutis data are dodgy). Illiteracy runs at about 45%. The lack of employment is offset by traditional support systems; one worker can support an entire extended family. So the government can buy the loyalty of, say, 30 people by hiring a single bureaucrat.
(Excerpt) Read more at economist.com ...
I spoke to someone stationed there once. He said the “national flower is dirt.”
Just imagine how much money you could make there if you set up a chain of businesses for escorts, cigarettes and booze.
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