# taz.de -- Migration policy in Djibouti: Small but strategically key | |
> For centuries, this country in the Horn of Africa has served as a | |
> corridor between Africa and Asia. Today it is the continent’s – and | |
> Europe's – most important military base. | |
Bild: German soldiers stationed in Djibouti are to fight piracy | |
Djibouti is one of Africa’s smallest countries. Located on the outermost | |
tip of the Horn of Africa, what it lacks in size it more than makes up for | |
in strategic importance. The country presides over a major harbour situated | |
on the Gulf of Aden, making it ideal for migrants in transit. For | |
millennia, this area has served as a stop-off point for people travelling | |
from the African continent and across the Mandeb Strait to the Arabian | |
Peninsula before moving on towards Asia. | |
Since 2008 more than 360,000 Africans have set sail from here for Yemen. | |
Around 80 percent of them are Ethiopians, the rest Eritreans and Somalis. | |
Most go in search of work in Arabia’s wealthy oil states. It is estimated | |
that a majority of these migrant workers have fallen victim to people | |
traffickers in search of cheap labour for the Gulf States. International | |
human rights organisations often publish reports detailing the brutal | |
mistreatment of African nannies or of African migrant workers on building | |
sites in Saudi Arabia. | |
Many suspect that this migration channel became impassable in 2015 when | |
civil war broke out in Yemen. However, according to RMMS, a regional think | |
tank that collects data on migration and analyses sources specifically for | |
the Horn of Africa region, migration across the Gulf of Aden hit record | |
highs in 2016 with more than 120,000 people reaching the Yemeni coast. 85 | |
percent of those arriving came from Ethiopia and 98 percent of Ethiopian | |
arrivals were from the Oromo community, explains RMMS migration specialist | |
Bram Frouws in an interview with taz. | |
According to Frouws, one reason for the continued movement of people is the | |
lack of security along the coastline due to the war. “There is no simple | |
explanation as to why the numbers are rising. We certainly haven’t seen any | |
decrease during this period of conflict,“ says Frouws. One of the few | |
examples of intervention took place in November 2016 when the International | |
Organization for Migration (IOM) rescued over 600 migrants stranded in the | |
war-torn land as part of a voluntary repatriation mission, returning them | |
to Djibouti. | |
## Secure country of origin | |
Yemen’s descent into civil war has triggered another migration issue: | |
Yemenis fleeing the turmoil at home and crossing the sea to Djibouti. There | |
are now more than 35,000 Yemenis in Djibouti, who make up the highest | |
percentage of new arrivals. To compare, the population of Djibouti | |
currently only stands at 900,000. According to data from the World Bank | |
from 2013, just 15,000 people from Djibouti live abroad, most of them in | |
France, the country’s former colonial ruler. Others live in Ethiopia and a | |
small number are in Algeria and Canada. If you examine statistics from the | |
past few years concerning migration to Europe via the Mediterranean, you | |
will be hard pushed to find any migrants from Djibouti. In 2015 a mere 305 | |
asylum seekers from Djibouti were registered across the whole of the EU. | |
Half of them had their applications rejected and were deported as Djibouti | |
is listed as a safe country of origin. | |
According to the national body responsible for refugees (the ONARS), at | |
present, this diminutive state is officially sheltering around 23,000 | |
refugees, most of them Somali. There are around 11,000 living in a camp | |
near Ali-Adeh close to the Somali border in the south of the country. | |
Another camp, Holl Holl, is home to roughly 2,000 people. Somalis and | |
Yemenis are automatically granted asylum in Djibouti. Applications from | |
Ethiopians, Eritreans and other nationalities are judged on a case-by-case | |
basis. The majority of migrant workers passing through the country are | |
housed in the densely populated areas along the coast, such as in the port | |
town of Obok or in the capital Djibouti. Many Yemenis also reside here. | |
Instead of registering as refugees in the camps, they prefer to pay for | |
their own accommodation in the cities. | |
In previous years, Djibouti’s coast guard had reported an increased number | |
of sea rescues. It was only in June that they were able to secure a boat | |
carrying over 140 Ethiopians, Somalis and Eritreans, handing it over to the | |
IOM, an organisation with a strong presence in Djibouti and which has | |
trained the country’s coast guard, particularly in procedures for dealing | |
with migrants. In October 2016 a ceremony was held to mark the opening of | |
the first train line for passenger and freight transport between Ethiopia | |
and Djibouti. It connects landlocked Ethiopia with Djibouti’s ports where | |
all of the country’s imports and exports are processed. In future this | |
train line is set to also play a key role for migration in the region. | |
## Military and trade | |
Despite being small in size, Djibouti is an important military base for | |
international armed forces stationed on the African continent. The only | |
African military base of the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) is | |
located here. The French have a 1,500-strong presence. Japanese, Chinese, | |
Italian and German personnel are also stationed here: take-offs and | |
landings are strictly timed at this busy military airport in the Horn of | |
Africa. Most US drone missions set off from here and the US also uses | |
Djibouti as a base for some of its interrogation activities as part of the | |
War on Terror. | |
The Gulf of Aden represents one of the main trade routes between Europe, | |
the Arabian Peninsula and Asia. It is also one of the world’s most | |
dangerous maritime routes in terms of the risk of piracy. Over 20,000 cargo | |
ships cross the Gulf every year carrying roughly 95 percent of the volume | |
of goods traded between Africa, Asia and Europe. After Somali pirates | |
realised the potential financial gains, hijackings became commonplace | |
followed by subsequent ransom demands. | |
In 2008 the EU launched Operation Atlanta to combat such crimes. It was the | |
EU’s first maritime military operation. European ships and aircraft have | |
been in action ever since offering protection to vessels of the World Food | |
Programme (WFP) that are transporting food to refugees and displaced people | |
in Somalia. Vessels transporting military equipment for the African Union | |
(AU) [peacekeeping] Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) also needed protection | |
against piracy. Consequently, there have been no reported pirate attacks in | |
the Gulf since 2015. | |
When taz enquired about future plans for Atlanta, the German armed forces | |
responded that, “in 2015 EU member states began a major strategic review of | |
all EU missions, which was undertaken following a suggestion made, in part, | |
by the German government“. They added that the European Union External | |
Action Service (EEAS) had since submitted its report to member states. In | |
subsequent consultations, members agreed to “adjust“ forces operating | |
around the Horn of Africa to better handle the threat of piracy which | |
fluctuates depending on local weather conditions (varying during the summer | |
and winter monsoon periods). The army stated that for the German Navy this | |
meant no additional ships would be deployed in the Horn of Africa besides | |
the ‚Bayern’ frigate and the ‘Spessart’ fuel transporter. “This allow… | |
to respond appropriately to the increased demand for maritime support as | |
part of other missions (EUNAVFOR MED) or to meet similar obligations (NATO | |
support in the Aegean),“ the German Armed forces explained. | |
## Coordinating migration policy | |
Due to the high international military presence in the region, Djibouti has | |
become an important hub for intelligence officials in Africa. It was here | |
that in 2015 a new institution was launched: HISS, the annual meeting of | |
the Heads of Intelligence and Security Services of the countries of the | |
Sahelo-Saharan region. There are currently discussions concerning the | |
creation of an African headquarters as part of the partnership between the | |
EU’s Frontex and Africa’s secret service organisations. Djibouti has been | |
suggested as a possible location. | |
Djibouti is also key as it serves as headquarters for several African | |
organisations: it is home to the head office of the Intergovernmental | |
Authority on Development (IGAD), which represents numerous countries in the | |
Horn of Africa, e.g. Somalia and Ethiopia, as well as Kenya and Uganda. The | |
body was created in the 1980s to reduce conflict and migration caused by | |
drought in the Horn of Africa. To this day, IGAD remains a key partner in | |
peace negotiations in South Sudan and Somalia. | |
The regional secretariat for ‚Mixed Migration’ (Regional Mixed Migration | |
Secretariat or RMMS) was also founded in Djibouti in 2011. It operates as a | |
research and coordination centre for major regional migration flows and | |
still receives financial support from German and European aid donors. In | |
November 2016 IGAD held a ‘Migration Policy Dialogue’ in the Ugandan | |
capital of Kampala during which member states agreed to the accelerated | |
implementation of the so-called ‚Migration Action Plan’. The ‘Regional | |
Committee for Mixed Migration’ also regularly meets in Djibouti to | |
coordinate the joint action of national governments to deal with the issue | |
of migration. At the meeting held in 2015, the fight against people | |
trafficking and the detention of migrants were the main points on the | |
agenda. The states involved are trying to implement cross-border measures | |
to tackle people smuggling. The summits are funded by the EU. | |
IGAD is the EU’s main partner in the Horn of Africa, particularly in terms | |
of managing water and food security projects financed through the EU | |
Emergency Trust Fund for Africa. The EU has earmarked €105 million from the | |
European Development Fund for investment in the country to assist the | |
government in the pursuit of its 'Vision 2035’ national plan, which aims to | |
help grow Djibouti’s middle class. | |
12 Dec 2016 | |
## AUTOREN | |
Simone Schlindwein | |
## TAGS | |
migControl | |
Jemen | |
## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA | |
Vor Jemens Küste: Schlepper stoßen Flüchtlinge ins Meer | |
Mindestens 29 Menschen seien dabei ums Leben gekommen, meldet eine | |
UN-Behörde. Sie nennt den Vorfall vor der jemenitischen Küste | |
„schockierend“. |