Narcotic
khat
dominates
Djibouti
life
Flights
from
neighbouring
Ethiopia
arrive
every
day
carrying
the
plant
that is
then
sold in
small
shops
across
the
country.
The tiny
Red Sea
state
imports
11
tonnes
of khat
daily,
spending
$170
million
a year

DJIBOUTI,
(Reuters)
- In a
dusty
room
filled
with
pillows,
eight
men sit
beside
small
piles of
plant
stems
and
cigarette
packets,
munching
mouthfuls
of green
narcotic
leaves.
Pinching
off more
emerald
foliage
and
stuffing
it into
his
mouth,
Isaac
Abdel
says
khat is
a way of
life in
east
Africa.
"This
khat has
become
the
petrol
of east
Africa,"
the
jobless
42-year-old
says,
showing
his
green
teeth
and
holding
up the
plant he
chews
every
day.
Illegal
in many
Western
nations,
the leaf
gives
the
chewer a
mild
amphetamine-like
high. It
is a
shrub
typically
grown in
Ethiopia
and
Kenya
and
chewed
by
people
throughout
the
Middle
East and
the Horn
of
Africa.
In
Djibouti,
it is
endemic.
Flights
from
neighbouring
Ethiopia
arrive
every
day
carrying
the
plant
that is
then
sold in
small
shops
across
the
country.
The tiny
Red Sea
state
imports
11
tonnes
of khat
daily,
spending
$170
million
a year,
the
United
Nations
says.
Taking a
sip of
water to
wash out
a
mouthful
of the
bitter-tasting
leaves,
one
chewer
says it
takes
about an
hour to
chew
through
one kilo
of khat,
or $5
worth.
Occasionally
glancing
up to
watch a
nature
show on
television,
transit
worker
Jama
Hassan
says
khat
keeps
people
in this
mainly
Muslim
nation
from
drinking
and
fighting.
"It is
part of
culture.
It is a
heritage
from our
ancestors.
We use
it
everyday
to keep
us
together.
We
don''''t
have to
go to
bad
places
like to
bars,"
the
42-year-old
says.
Every
day,
crowds
of
Djiboutian
men
flock to
houses
and
cafes
across
the
country
to chew
quietly
with
friends.
In the
afternoon
when the
chewing
begins,
the
city''''s
streets
are
empty.
"There''''s
a high
in your
body.
When
we''''re
not
working,
we''''re
chatting
and
chewing,"
says
Ethiopian
Ragi
Absalam,
28,
another
transit
worker.
But like
alcohol
and
drugs in
the
West,
khat is
addictive
and has
taken a
social
toll.
NERVOUS
WAIT
It is
afternoon
in the
tiny
port
city and
men in
green
taxis
with
white
stripes
mill
around
nervously
waiting
for
today''''s
khat
delivery.
The
shipment
is late,
and
people
are
edgy.
But in a
nation
where 60
percent
of the
820,000
population
is
unemployed,
many
chew
away as
much as
10
percent
to 20
percent
of their
salary,
and
residents
complain
that
fathers
abandon
homes
and
children
for half
the day,
every
day.
Despite
this,
Djibouti
managed
a 4.8
percent
GDP
growth
in 2006
mainly
due to
increased
port
activity.
But the
International
Monetary
Fund (IMF)
says
khat
chewing
is
hurting
labour
productivity
as most
activities
stop in
the
afternoon.
Finally,
the
truck
arrives,
but any
nervousness
is
quickly
replaced
by a
frantic
rush to
the
drop-off
point.
Men in
neon
vests
toss a
seemingly
endless
supply
of khat
bags
down to
expecting
sellers,
who then
speed
off to
town to
resell
the
white
bags to
khat
vendors.
Analysts
say
Djibouti''''s
unemployment
estimates
could be
lower if
the
informal
sector —
including
the
orbit of
workers
around
the use
and sale
of khat
— were
factored
in. Taxi
driver
Jama
Hassan
says
running
shipments
of khat
to the
city is
the only
job he
could
find.
"We get
5,000
francs
($28) a
day but
almost
all is
taken in
gas. I
take
home
about
2,000,"
the
60-year-old
says.
"This
car isn''''t
even
mine. I
took
this
job,
because
I was
jobless,"
the
father
of eight
children
says.
(Additional
reporting
by Omar
Hassan
Awale)
Jack
Kimball,
Reuters