Djibouti has agreed to Ethiopia's proposal to acquire a share of
the Horn country's port, a deal secured by Ethiopian Prime Minister
Abiy Ahmed on his first foreign visit as Head of State over the weekend.
The
agreement comes after Djibouti unilaterally annulled a contract with
the United Arab Emirates' giant Dubai Ports World (DP) two months ago.
Mr Abiy held talks with the host President Ismail Omar Guelleh and also addressed the Djibouti parliament.
Ethiopian
government spokesman, Ahmed Shide, said the percentage apportioned was
yet to be determined by experts after assessing the value and profit
margins of the port.
Major firms
Formal agreements
will be signed within two months and experts from both countries have
been tasked to do the paper work, according to Mr Ahmed.
Ethiopia
also agreed to apportion to Djibouti shares in its major firms of their
choice, including Ethiopian Airlines. Djibouti also showed an interest
in agricultural activities in Ethiopia.
The tiny Horn
country has previously been allowed to pump 200 metric cubes of drinking
water daily from Ethiopia's Somali region.
More than 95 per cent of Ethiopia's import and export trade passes through Djibouti's Port.
A serious disagreement erupted between DP-World, the main port administrator, and the Djibouti government last January.
Two private shipping companies, Singapore’s Pacific International Lines (PIL) and France' Compagnie Maritime d'Affrètement (CMA)- Compagnie Générale Maritime
(CMA/CGM), were negotiating with Djibouti to further develop the
recently inaugurated Doraleh container terminal, at an estimated $600
million.
DP-World has filed a lawsuit in London
against Djibouti, demanding that the government honour the previous
agreement until the case is resolved.
The Ethiopian acquisition is likely to heighten the row.
Djibouti has previously accused DP-World of funding an exiled opposition leader and businessman.
Lost its access
Earlier
this year, Ethiopia acquired a share of Port Berbera from Somaliland,
along with UAE, DP-World and the Somaliland government.
The agreement has been opposed by Mogadishu, but both Ethiopia and UAE have strongly defended the deal.
Ethiopia, with an estimated 100 million population, lost its access to the sea after Eritrea seceded in 1991.
Apart from Djibouti, Ethiopia also uses Port Sudan and Port Berbera for its import and export activities.
Ethiopia
and Djibouti are connected by a railway and a Liquefied Natural Gas
(LNG) pipeline project was underway to export gas from the Somali
region.
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