Μετα την Σομαλία, η Τουρκία ετοιμάζει νέες ναυτικές εγκαταστάσεις στο
Πτολεμαικό λιμάνι της Καλής Ελπίδος το οποίο πλέον ονομάζεται SUAKIN
και βρίσκεται στο Σουδάν ακριβώς απέναντι απο την Τζέντα!
Τα διεθνή μέσα μεταδίδουν:
ΙSTANBUL/KHARTOUM
(Reuters)
Turkey will rebuild a ruined Ottoman port city on Sudan's Red Sea coast and construct a naval dock to maintain civilian and military vessels, Sudan's foreign minister said on Tuesday, as Ankara expands military and economic ties in Africa.
The restoration at Suakin was agreed during a visit to
the ancient port by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, Foreign Minister
Ibrahim Ghandour said.
Making the first trip by a Turkish president to Sudan,
Erdogan said Turkey had been temporarily granted part of Suakin so it
could rebuild the area as a tourist site and a transit point for
pilgrims crossing the Red Sea to Mecca.
He said the Suakin deal was one of several, worth $650
million in total, agreed with Sudan, which emerged from two decades of
U.S. sanctions in October and is seeking to attract international
investment.
The countries also agreed "to build a dock to maintain
civilian and military vessels," Ghandour told reporters, adding that
they had signed an agreement "that could result in any kind of military
cooperation".
The agreements come three months after Turkey formally
opened a $50 million military training base in Somalia as it exerts
increasing influence in the region.
Suakin was Sudan's major port when it was ruled by the
Ottoman Empire, but fell into disuse over the last century after the
construction of Port Sudan, 35 miles (60 km) to the north.
Speaking on Monday in Khartoum, Erdogan said the
refurbished port city would attract Mecca-bound pilgrims who would want
to see the island's history, helping Sudan's tourism sector.
"Imagine, people from Turkey wishing to go on pilgrimage
will come and visit the historical areas on Suakin Island," Erdogan
said. "From there ... they will cross to Jeddah by boat."
The other agreements signed during Erdogan's visit
include Turkish investment to build Khartoum's planned new airport and
private sector investments in cotton production, electricity generation
and building grain silos and meat slaughterhouses.
Erdogan and Bashir said they aimed for trade between the
two countries to reach $10 billion, Turkey's Foreign Economic Relations
Board said.
In October, the United States lifted a trade embargo and
other penalties that had cut Sudan off from much of the global financial
system.
Sudan's state minister for investment has said he aims to
attract investment of $10 billion a year, compared to $1 billion
estimated by the United Nations for 2016.
"Dailysabah"
Sudan has agreed to hand over Suakin Island to Turkey for rebuilding,
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said late Monday while speaking at the
Sudan-Turkey Business Forum.
After visiting the island, Erdoğan said earlier on the same day that the island needs rebuilding and called for restoration during a speech in the University of Khartoum, where he was awarded an honorary doctorate. Erdoğan said that Turkey will rebuild and revive the island.
Ottomans used the port city to secure Hejaz province – present-day western Saudi Arabia – from attacks on the Red Sea front.
During his official two-day visit to the country, Erdoğan visited several Ottoman sites, including Al-Hanafi Mosque, Al-Shafei Mosque and an old customs building located on Suakin Island. These mosques were restored by the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA).
A cooperation and investment agreement between Turkey and Sudan was signed at the customs building.
Speaking at the University of Khartoum on Monday evening, Erdoğan elaborated on his impressions of Suakin Island.
"Seeing the current status of Suakin Island saddened us. The island was totally destroyed. If you assign this island to us, we will restore and make it worthy of its historical glory. Sudan will be proud of this and can take new steps in tourism," Erdoğan said and suggested that the island, when restored and revived, can be a part of the umrah or hajj route as it once was. He cited that pilgrims used to come to Suakin, spend some time on the island and then travel to Jeddah.
The president later announced at the Sudan-Turkey Business Forum that Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir agreed to assign the island to Turkey. Turkey's restoration of the island will be a strong message emphasizing the Turkish-Sudanese partnership.
Until the 19th century, Suakin was the residential address of the Ottoman Empire's Habesh Eyalet, which is today's Eritrea, Djibouti and northern Somalia.
A port city located northeast of Sudan, Suakin was the most significant port in Nubia. After the establishment of Port Sudan, Suakin diminished in importance.
In 1571, when Sultan Selim the Grim conquered Egypt, Suakin also became a part of Ottoman territory and remained as such until the 19th century.
Yemen's Governor Özdemir Pasha, who was appointed to the Habesh governorship in 1554, founded the province of Habesh on July 5, 1555 and declared Suakin Island on the Red Sea coast of Sudan as the provincial center. In the 16th century, this province was affiliated with eight sanjaks.
Fortresses were constructed by the Ottomans for the conservation of the region, and the southern navy was divided into the Indian, Suez and Muha captaincies as the Red Sea became an "Ottoman inner sea."
The administration of the city was left to the Khedivate of Egypt in 1865. With the British occupation of Egypt in 1882, the city effectively left the Turkish sovereignty and was definitely left to Egypt under British sovereignty in accordance with Article 17 of the Treaty of Lausanne dated July 24, 1923.
Suakin became part of Sudan's lands as Sudan gained independence from the British-Egyptian government in 1956.
After visiting the island, Erdoğan said earlier on the same day that the island needs rebuilding and called for restoration during a speech in the University of Khartoum, where he was awarded an honorary doctorate. Erdoğan said that Turkey will rebuild and revive the island.
Ottomans used the port city to secure Hejaz province – present-day western Saudi Arabia – from attacks on the Red Sea front.
During his official two-day visit to the country, Erdoğan visited several Ottoman sites, including Al-Hanafi Mosque, Al-Shafei Mosque and an old customs building located on Suakin Island. These mosques were restored by the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA).
A cooperation and investment agreement between Turkey and Sudan was signed at the customs building.
Speaking at the University of Khartoum on Monday evening, Erdoğan elaborated on his impressions of Suakin Island.
"Seeing the current status of Suakin Island saddened us. The island was totally destroyed. If you assign this island to us, we will restore and make it worthy of its historical glory. Sudan will be proud of this and can take new steps in tourism," Erdoğan said and suggested that the island, when restored and revived, can be a part of the umrah or hajj route as it once was. He cited that pilgrims used to come to Suakin, spend some time on the island and then travel to Jeddah.
The president later announced at the Sudan-Turkey Business Forum that Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir agreed to assign the island to Turkey. Turkey's restoration of the island will be a strong message emphasizing the Turkish-Sudanese partnership.
Until the 19th century, Suakin was the residential address of the Ottoman Empire's Habesh Eyalet, which is today's Eritrea, Djibouti and northern Somalia.
A port city located northeast of Sudan, Suakin was the most significant port in Nubia. After the establishment of Port Sudan, Suakin diminished in importance.
In 1571, when Sultan Selim the Grim conquered Egypt, Suakin also became a part of Ottoman territory and remained as such until the 19th century.
Yemen's Governor Özdemir Pasha, who was appointed to the Habesh governorship in 1554, founded the province of Habesh on July 5, 1555 and declared Suakin Island on the Red Sea coast of Sudan as the provincial center. In the 16th century, this province was affiliated with eight sanjaks.
Fortresses were constructed by the Ottomans for the conservation of the region, and the southern navy was divided into the Indian, Suez and Muha captaincies as the Red Sea became an "Ottoman inner sea."
The administration of the city was left to the Khedivate of Egypt in 1865. With the British occupation of Egypt in 1882, the city effectively left the Turkish sovereignty and was definitely left to Egypt under British sovereignty in accordance with Article 17 of the Treaty of Lausanne dated July 24, 1923.
Suakin became part of Sudan's lands as Sudan gained independence from the British-Egyptian government in 1956.
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