Transport in the Arab League

Transport in the Arab League is considered fairly undeveloped. Transport infrastructure in the states of the Arab League has been growing slowly.

Highways

Regional highways

Highways and Roads in the States of the Arab League

There are several cross-Arab State roads, crossing the Arab world from its farthest point in the west in Mauritania, to its eastern farthest point in Oman. The Arab States are connected with roads and highways that cross deserts, mountains and forests. The most developed state with high road infrastructure is the United Arab Emirates, followed by Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Morocco, Jordan and Egypt, while countries such as Sudan, Libya, Mauritania, Somalia and Yemen seem to have a lot of building to do.

Railways

Rail Lines in the Arab League

Egypt has by far the oldest railroad in the Middle east and Africa and one of the oldest in the world, built in 1854 by Khedive Abbas I of Egypt. Now Egypt has the most extensive railway system in the Middle East, and is the only country in the Arab League to have an underground metro system in Cairo.

The Souk Ahras - Ghardimaou line already connect Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia with each other, but Morocco and Algeria have closed the line due to increased tensions. while Libya, Egypt and Sudan are not connected to each other. In the Asian part, almost all Arab states have been connected by railroads, except the Arab states of the Persian Gulf.

Perhaps the most developed railways connecting Arab states can be found between Iraq and Syria, with the Iraqi Republic Railways which run through Syria to Turkey. New projects underway to develop the Arab rail lines have been under construction, linking the south Egyptian city of Abu Simbel with the north Sudanese city of Wadi Halfa.

Proposed Railways

Ports and harbors

Atlantic Ocean

 Mauritania

Indian Ocean

 Comoros

 Somalia

Persian Gulf

 Bahrain

 Kuwait

 Iraq

 Saudi Arabia

 Oman

 Qatar

 United Arab Emirates

Arabian Sea

 Oman

 Yemen

Mediterranean Sea

 Algeria

 Egypt

 Lebanon

 Libya

 Palestine

 Tunisia

 Syria

Red Sea

 Egypt

 Djibouti

 Jordan

 Saudi Arabia

 Sudan

 Yemen

Merchant marine

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.