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China negotiating military base in Djibouti 11051501.


| 2015
Defence & Security News - China
 
China negotiating military base in Djibouti
China government is negotiating Djibouti to open military base in the strategic port of Djibouti as China influence grows in the region. Djibouti President Ismael Omar Gulleh said discussion are ongoing between the two countries, saying China would be welcomed.
     
China negotiating military base in Djibouti A Chinese marine observes the situation on the sea during an anti-piracy mission
     
Djibouti is already home to Camp Lemonnier, the US military headquarters on the continent and the home to the Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) of the U.S. Africa Command (USAFRICOM), used for covert, anti-terror and other operations in Yemen, Somalia and elsewhere across Africa.

France and Japan also have bases in the port, a former French colony that guards the entrance to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal, and which has been used by European and other international navies as a base in the fight against piracy from neighbouring Somalia.

China is already financing several major infrastructure projects estimated to total more than $9 billion (8 billion euros), including improved ports, airports and railway lines to landlocked Ethiopia, for whom Djibouti is a lifeline port.

“France’s presence is old, and the Americans found that the position of Djibouti could help in the fight against terrorism in the region,” Guelleh said.

“The Japanese want to protect themselves from piracy - and now the Chinese also want to protect their interests, and they are welcome,” he said.

Djibouti overseas the narrow Bab al-Mandeb straits, the channel separating Africa from Arabia and one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world, leading into the Red Sea and northwards to the Mediterranean.

Djibouti and Beijing signed a military agreement allowing the Chinese navy to use Djibouti port in February 2014, a move that angered Washington.

China aims to install a permanent military base in Obock, Djibouti’s northern port city.

In recent years, Guelleh has increasingly turned to China as a key economic partner. Last year he switched the port operating contract to a Chinese company, after the previous Dubai-based operator was accused of corruption.
 
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