Khartoum: Jewel Of The Desert

KHARTOUM, SUDAN - JANUARY 11, 2007: Guests at the wedding of Samah AbdelMalik Elberier, from one of the richest Sudanese families, the Abdelmalik, and Ahmed Abdallah AlHaj Musa at the Riviera Hall in Omdurman on January 11, 2007 in Khartoum, Sudan. Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, lies at the point where both the Blue and the White Nile converge and in recent years has been best known for the political turmoil which stems from it's government. Within this war torn city lays the largest commercial construction site in Africa known as Al Mogran Project, which spans 1,500 acres, at a place known as Alsunut from the name of its nearby forest. With the help of foreign Chinese workers, the Sudanese Alsunut Development Company LTD, owned by the Dal Group - the first industrial group of the country, are working furiously to develop a new Dubai which is to become the commercial and financial headquarters of Islamist East Africa. The site is to include multiple modern office towers, duplexes and golf courses. The project is to cost USD $4billion and is scheduled to house both the headquarters of the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company as well as Petrodar, both of which are Chinese, Malaysian, Indian and Sudanese joint venture oil companies and is due to be complete within the next five to fifteen years. (Photo by Marco Di Lauro/Getty Images)
KHARTOUM, SUDAN - JANUARY 11, 2007: Guests at the wedding of Samah AbdelMalik Elberier, from one of the richest Sudanese families, the Abdelmalik, and Ahmed Abdallah AlHaj Musa at the Riviera Hall in Omdurman on January 11, 2007 in Khartoum, Sudan. Khartoum, the capital of Sudan, lies at the point where both the Blue and the White Nile converge and in recent years has been best known for the political turmoil which stems from it's government. Within this war torn city lays the largest commercial construction site in Africa known as Al Mogran Project, which spans 1,500 acres, at a place known as Alsunut from the name of its nearby forest. With the help of foreign Chinese workers, the Sudanese Alsunut Development Company LTD, owned by the Dal Group - the first industrial group of the country, are working furiously to develop a new Dubai which is to become the commercial and financial headquarters of Islamist East Africa. The site is to include multiple modern office towers, duplexes and golf courses. The project is to cost USD $4billion and is scheduled to house both the headquarters of the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company as well as Petrodar, both of which are Chinese, Malaysian, Indian and Sudanese joint venture oil companies and is due to be complete within the next five to fifteen years. (Photo by Marco Di Lauro/Getty Images)
Khartoum: Jewel Of The Desert
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Credit:
Marco Di Lauro / Stringer
Editorial #:
80888848
Collection:
Getty Images News
Date created:
11 January, 2007
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Getty Images Europe
Object name:
80855596MDL002_Khartoum