
The ghost towns left behind by Qatar's oil boom
CNN
The crumbling remains of abandoned fishing villages on the northwest coast of Qatar offer a fascinating journey into the country's past before the oil and gas-fueled economic boom drew people away from traditional maritime ways of life.
Doha (CNN) — Past the small arched door, a narrow spiral stair leads up to the top of the windswept minaret, still standing tall even as almost everything around it has crumbled. Inside the tiny room atop the circular shaft, four little windows open up to the long-abandoned surroundings. On the one side, the tumbling ruins of old fishermen's houses -- most without a roof, doors or windows -- stretch along the turquoise coastline. On the other, the Qatari desert. This is Al Jumail, one of several forsaken villages dotting the northwest coast of Qatar. The remnants of these little-known "ghost towns" offer a fascinating glimpse of life in ages past, before Qatar's spectacular oil- and gas-fueled economic boom began pulling people away from its small, traditional villages and into its expanding modern capital of Doha.
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