URI: 
       # 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.
       
   IMG 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 allows us
       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
       
   DIR Simone Schlindwein
       
       ## TAGS
       
   DIR migControl
   DIR Jemen
       
       ## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA
       
   DIR Vor Jemens Küste: Schlepper stoßen Flüchtlinge ins Meer
       
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