Saly

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Saly
Sali
Saly
Coordinates: 14°26′18″N 17°0′45″W / 14.43833°N 17.01250°W / 14.43833; -17.01250Coordinates: 14°26′18″N 17°0′45″W / 14.43833°N 17.01250°W / 14.43833; -17.01250
Country Senegal
Region Thiès
Department M'bour
Elevation 14 m (46 ft)
Population
  Total 20,000

Saly (also called Sali or Saly Portudal) is a seaside resort area on the Petite Côte of Senegal, south of Dakar. It is the top tourist destination in all of West Africa.

History

Saly was originally a Portuguese trading post known as Porto de Ale, which became Portudal, and later Sali Portudal.

On February 24, 1984, the resort was created on a previously unoccupied tract of land near the former trading post. It was about this time that tourism began to take off in Senegal.

Administration

Baobab trees, Adansonia digitata, in the Sahel sub-Saharan savanna of Saly
Sandy beach lined with coconut palm trees

Saly is part of M'bour, Thiès.

Flora

The resort is located on a sandy beach lined with coconut palm trees.

Population

The population is difficult to quantify because of the constant stream of tourists in and out of the area as well as the number of temporary residents. It has been suggested that an average of 20,000 people live in the area at any given time.[1]

Economy

Saly's economy relies almost entirely on tourism. Hotel complexes, nightclubs, bars, restaurants, shops, water sports, real estate agencies all compete for the business of wealthy visitors from other countries.

Seminars and symposiums are often held in Saly.

Social problems

The rapid development of mass tourism in a relatively poor country has had some negative consequences, such as petty crime, prostitution, pedophilia, and the spread of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.

For a long time, these social problems were not discussed publicly so that the resort's reputation would not be tarnished. An observatory for the protection of children against abuse and sexual exploitation called Avenir de l'Enfant (The Child's Future) was created in M'bour by a Senegalese non-governmental organization in 2002.

In 2003, M6, a French television service, broadcast a report focusing on Saly as part of the show Ça me révolte,[2] meaning "That Disgusts Me". The show had hitherto presented mainly on sex tourism in Asia.

References

  1. (French) Sénégal et Gambie. Lonely Planet. 2006. p. 135. 
  2. (French) Karim Fall (June 12, 2003). "Tourisme sexuel : des images qui font mal, vues de Paris". Soleil. 

Bibliography

  • (English) A. K. Diagne (2001). "Impacts of Coastal Tourism Development and Sustainability: A Geographical Case Study of Sali in the Senegalese Petite Cote". Geographical Review of Japan. B 74 (1): 62–77. 
  • (French) Guy Thilmans (1968). "Sur l'existence, fin XVIe siècle, de comptoirs néerlandais à Joal et Portudal". Notes africaines (Sénégal) (117): 17–18. 
  • (French) Effets du projet Sali sur l'économie du Sénégal. Dakar. 1973. p. 75. 

External links

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