How do you start a dairy industry overnight in a wealthy desert nation with its transport links closed? You buy 4,000 cows from Australia and the U.S. and put them on airplanes.
That is what Qatari businessman Moutaz Al Khayyat
told Bloomberg
Last week, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates
all cut ties to Qatar
Or rather, it did until last week. Qatar is a peninsula in the Persian Gulf, and it shares its only land border with Saudi Arabia — a border that is now closed.
The news sent people
rushing to grocery stores
Qatar is the richest country in the world — its gross domestic product per capita is $141,542, according to
2015 data
But while Qatari citizens are very wealthy,
foreign workers make up 90 percent of the country's population
And Qatar needs those foreign workers now more than ever. As it prepares to host the 2022 World Cup, the nation is building
eight stadiums and a metro system for Doha
It's the low-paid workers who would bear the brunt of any food shortages from the blockage, which is happening in the middle of Ramadan.
Hence the Great Qatari Bovine Airlift of 2017.
After they land, the cows will make a home in the Wisconsin of Qatar "on a site covering the equivalent of almost 70 soccer fields, (where) new grey sheds line two strips of verdant grass in the desert with a road running through the middle up to a small mosque," according to Bloomberg.
Al Khayyat, chairman of a company called
Power International Holding
Qatar's
"National Vision 2030"
Al Khayyat
told
Flying in thousands of cows when you need them is certainly one definition of turnkey.
"No one in his daily life feels a crisis" because the border is closed, Al Khayyat told Bloomberg. "The government is working very hard to ensure there's no effect."
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