Saturday, December 26, 2009

Djibouti

Introduction




The city of Djibouti in northeastern Africa has a fine natural harbor on the Gulf of Aden. The small country of Djibouti grew up around the city and depends on the trade that passes through the city's port. More than four fifths of Djibouti's population lives in Djibouti city.





Places of interest



The city of Djibouti has a mixture of old and modern buildings in African and French styles. The older parts of the city, including the port, are on a peninsula. Near the base of the peninsula, Menilek Square contains the government palace. The city has a stadium, a French cultural center, and a lively, colorful open-air market. Numerous small cafes, shops, bars, and restaurants dot the city.





Economy



The city's economy depends upon the port and a railway to Addis Ababa. Trouble in other countries has often hurt the city's economy. An examples was the Ethiopian civil war that interfered with rail operations in the late 1970s. Because natural resources are so scarce in the country, there is little industry in Djibouti city. Aid from France is important to the economy.





History



Nomadic peoples who travel from place to place have lived in northeastern Africa for thousands of years. Europeans became interested in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden when the Suez Canal opened up a connection between those waterways and the Mediterranean. In about 1888 the French, who had built the canal, placed a fueling station for navy ships in the harbor of Djibouti. A port city soon rose up, and the colony of French Somaliland grew around it.



Djibouti city became the capital of the colony in 1892. Work began in the same year on a railway running inland from the city. In 1917 the railway reached the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa. Djibouti city was by then a major port and supply station. Djibouti city remained the capital when the colony became the French Territory of the Afars and Issas in 1967 and when it became the independent Republic of Djibouti in 1977.



In the latter part of the 20th century, droughts and wars in the region sent many refugees to Djibouti from Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea. As a result, Djibouti's population increased greatly. Population (1995 estimate), 383,000