Khaleej Times

Ethiopia eyes role in Somali port

- Nizar Manek

addis ababa — Ethiopia is in talks to acquire shares in a joint venture involving DP World that will manage a port in northern Somalia, a Somali official said, a move that could give the fast-growing yet landlocked Horn of Africa economy its first stake in foreign docks.

Somaliland, a semi-autonomous territory that aspires to statehood, has agreed “in principle” to give Ethiopia a 19 per cent share in the venture administer­ing Berbera port, according to Foreign Minister Saad Ali Shire. Somaliland’s government and Dubai-based DP World, which has a 30-year concession to manage and develop the facility, will be the majority shareholde­rs in Somaliland-registered DPW Berbera, he said.

If Ethiopia takes its share, Somaliland will hold 30 per cent of the company, while DP World will have 51 per cent, according to Shire. Berbera sits on the Gulf of Aden, a waterway that leads to the Red Sea and Suez Canal, and is also where Somaliland says the UAE is leasing a military airport that may be expanded into a naval facility.

Ethiopia, Africa’s second-most populous nation, is pitching itself as an export-oriented manufactur­ing hub, with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund forecastin­g economic growth of 7.5 per cent this year, the fastest pace on the continent after Ivory Coast. Ethiopia’s transport and informatio­n ministers and Foreign Ministry spokesman didn’t respond to phone calls and text messages seeking comment on the Berbera share offer.

Share structure

Shire said the venture is presently 65 per cent owned by DP World, with Somaliland holding the rest, and nothing legally binding has yet been agreed with Ethiopia. DP World, which operates 78 terminals in 40 countries, announced it would hold 65 per cent in the venture in September. It won’t comment on the share structure “for the time being,” spokesman Michael Vertigans said by e-mail.

Shire said the Berbera facility will have a container terminal and be mainly used for container traffic as a transit hub for landlocked nations, particular­ly Ethiopia. Currently more than 90 per cent of Ethiopia’s trade passes through another Red Sea neighbour, Djibouti, according to that country’s ports authority.

A new $4.2-billion, Chinese-built railway between Ethiopia and Djibouti is set to cut cargo-journey times to 12 hours, from three days by road. DP World has a 50-year concession to operate a container terminal in Djibouti, which the government unsuccessf­ully sought the rescission of at a London arbitratio­n court, Dubai said in February.

Ethiopia’s industrial policy strategy sees the railway line providing transport services for 7.5 million metric tonnes of cargo per year by 2020. Somaliland is planning a 260km road from Berbera port to the Ethiopian border, said Shire.

“A shareholdi­ng doesn’t necessaril­y mean recognitio­n of Somaliland as a state,” said Mogus Tekle Michael, deputy director of the Ethiopian Foreign Relations Strategic Studies Institute and a former Foreign Ministry spokesman. Ethiopia would be “more than willing to grab any opportunit­y” to play a role in developing any port in the region, including Berbera, he said.

The planned UAE military base in the Berbera area will “add value on the security side” to the use of Berbera port, Shire said. The use of Berbera, Somaliland’s only major harbour, to import materials for the constructi­on of the UAE facility is “just common sense,” he said. The UAE hasn’t publicly commented on any of the plans for a base detailed by Shire.

DP World isn’t involved “in any way” with the base, “which is a matter for both government­s,” Vertigans said. — Bloomberg

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 ?? — AFP ?? Somaliland will give Ethiopia a 19 per cent share in the venture administer­ing Berbera port.
— AFP Somaliland will give Ethiopia a 19 per cent share in the venture administer­ing Berbera port.

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