DP World Vows to Defend Rights in Doraleh Container Terminal

The entrance gate of Doraleh Multi-Purpose Port in Djibouti.
(AFP file)
The entrance gate of Doraleh Multi-Purpose Port in Djibouti. (AFP file)
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DP World Vows to Defend Rights in Doraleh Container Terminal

The entrance gate of Doraleh Multi-Purpose Port in Djibouti.
(AFP file)
The entrance gate of Doraleh Multi-Purpose Port in Djibouti. (AFP file)

Global ports operator DP World said Tuesday that it would continue to pursue all legal means to defend its rights in a raging dispute with the government of Djibouti, given that it is a shareholder and concessionaire in Doraleh Container Terminal (DCT).

DP World described Djibouti's decision on Sunday to nationalize the port as "a blatant disregard for the rule of law and respect for commercial contracts."

This step is the latest in the campaign launched by Djibouti government since five years in order to deprive DCT of the agreement signed in 2006, DP World said in a statement published Tuesday – the agreement granted DP World the right to manage the terminal in which it has a stake in.

On August 31, the High Court of England & Wales issued an injunction restraining Djibouti's Port de Djibouti (PDSA), as a shareholder in DCT, from treating its joint venture shareholders' agreement with DP World as terminated. The UK court has further prohibited PDSA from removing directors of the DCT joint venture company.

The concession agreement between DP World and Djibouti, signed in 2006, is governed by English law and through the London Court of International Arbitration, the port operator said.

“Investors across the world must think twice about investing in Djibouti and reassess any agreements they may have with a government that has no respect for legal agreements and changes them at will without agreement or consent,” a DP World spokesperson said.

The terminal was run by DP World since 2006, however, in late February Djibouti canceled the contract.



Morocco Receives 17.4 Million Tourists in 2024, Up 20% on 2023

FILE PHOTO: People walk outside the Cinema Museum of Ouarzazate, Morocco, October 23, 2024. REUTERS/Stelios Misinas/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk outside the Cinema Museum of Ouarzazate, Morocco, October 23, 2024. REUTERS/Stelios Misinas/File Photo
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Morocco Receives 17.4 Million Tourists in 2024, Up 20% on 2023

FILE PHOTO: People walk outside the Cinema Museum of Ouarzazate, Morocco, October 23, 2024. REUTERS/Stelios Misinas/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: People walk outside the Cinema Museum of Ouarzazate, Morocco, October 23, 2024. REUTERS/Stelios Misinas/File Photo

Morocco received a record 17.4 million tourists in 2024, up 20% compared with previous year, with Moroccans living abroad accounting for nearly half the total, the tourism ministry said on Thursday.
Tourism accounts for about 7% of the North African country's gross domestic product and is a key source of jobs and foreign currency, Reuters reported.
The number of arrivals this year was two years ahead of target, the ministry said in a statement. It expects Morocco to receive 26 million tourists by 2030, when the country co-hosts the World Cup, together with Spain and Portugal.
Morocco has opened additional air routes to key tourist markets, while promoting new destinations within the country and encouraging the renovation of hotels.
From January to November, tourism revenue rose 7.2% to a record 104 billion dirhams, according to Morocco's foreign exchange regulator.