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ETHIOPIA TO FILL DISPUTED DAM, DEAL OR NO DEAL
BULTUM MEDIA - It’s a clash over water usage
that Egypt calls an existential threat and Ethiopia calls a lifeline for
millions out of poverty. Just weeks remain before the filling of Africa’s most
powerful hydroelectric dam might begin, and tense talks between the countries
on its operation have yet to reach a deal.
In an interview with The
Associated Press, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew on Friday
declared that his country will go ahead and start filling the $4.6 billion
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam next month, even without an agreement. “For us
it is not mandatory to reach an agreement before starting filling the dam,
hence we will commence the filling process in the coming rainy season,” he
said.
“We are working hard to reach a
deal, but still we will go ahead with our schedule whatever the outcome is. If
we have to wait for others’ blessing, then the dam may remain idle for years, which
we won’t allow to happen,” he said. He added that “we want to make it clear
that Ethiopia will not beg Egypt and Sudan to use its own water resource for
its development,” pointing out that Ethiopia is paying for the dam’s
construction itself.
He spoke after the latest round
of talks with Egypt and Sudan on the dam, the first since discussions broke
down in February, failed to reach agreement.
No date has been set for talks to
resume, and the foreign minister said Ethiopia doesn’t believe it’s time to
take them to a head of state level.
The years-long dispute pits
Ethiopia’s desire to become a major power exporter and development engine
against Egypt’s concern that the dam will significantly curtail its water
supply if filled too quickly. Sudan has long been caught between the competing
interests.
The arrival of the rainy season
is bringing more water to the Blue Nile, the main branch of the Nile, and
Ethiopia sees an ideal time to begin filling the dam’s reservoir next month.
Both Egypt and Ethiopia have
hinted at military steps to protect their interests, and experts fear a
breakdown in talks could lead to conflict.
Ethiopia’s foreign minister would
not say whether his country would use military action to defend the dam and its
operations.
“This dam should have been a
reason for cooperation and regional integration, not a cause for controversies
and warmongering,” he said. “Egyptians are exaggerating their propaganda on the
dam issue and playing a political gamble. Some of them seem as if they are
longing for a war to break out.”
Gedu added: “Our reading is that
the Egyptian side wants to dictate and control even future developments on our
river. We won’t ask for permission to carry out development projects on our own
water resources. This is both legally and morally unacceptable.”
He said Ethiopia has offered to
fill the dam in four to seven years, taking possible low rainfall into account.
Sticking points in the talks have
been how much water Ethiopia will release downstream from the dam during a
multi-year drought and how Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan will resolve any future
disputes.
The United States earlier this
year tried to broker a deal, but Ethiopia did not attend the signing meeting
and accused the Trump administration of siding with Egypt. This week some
Ethiopians felt vindicated when the U.S. National Security Council tweeted that
“257 million people in east Africa are relying on Ethiopia to show strong
leadership, which means striking a fair deal.”
In reply to that, Ethiopia’s
foreign minister said: “Statements issued from governments and other
institutions on the dam should be crafted carefully not to take sides and
impair the fragile talks, especially at this delicate time. They should issue
fair statements or just issue no statements at all.”
He also rejected the idea that
the issue should be taken to the United Nations Security Council, as Egypt
wants. Egypt’s foreign ministry issued a statement Friday saying Egypt has
urged the Security Council to intervene in the dispute to help the parties
reach a “fair and balanced solution” and prevent Ethiopia from “taking any
unilateral actions.”
The latest talks saw officials
from the U.S., European Union and South Africa, the current chairman of the
African Union, attending as observers.
Sudan’s Irrigation Minister
Yasser Abbas told reporters after talks ended Wednesday that the three
counties’ irrigation leaders have agreed on “90% or 95%” of the technical
issues but the dispute over the “legal points” in the deal remains dissolved.
The Sudanese minister said his
country and Egypt rejected Ethiopia’s attempts to include articles on water
sharing and old Nile treaties in the dam deal. Egypt has received the lion’s
share of the Nile’s waters under decades-old agreements dating back to the
British colonial era. Eighty-five percent of the Nile’s waters originate in
Ethiopia from the Blue Nile.
“The Egyptians want us to offer a
lot, but they are not ready to offer us anything,” Gedu said Friday. “They want
to control everything. We are not discussing a water-sharing agreement.”
The countries should not get
stuck in a debate about historic water rights, William Davison, senior analyst
on Ethiopia with the International Crisis Group, told reporters this week.
“During a period of filling, yes, there’s reduced water downstream. But that’s
a temporary period,” he said.
Initial power generation from the
dam could be seen late this year or in early 2021, he said.
Ethiopia’ foreign minister
expressed disappointment in Egypt’s efforts to find backing for its side.
“Our African brotherly countries
should have supported us, but instead they are tainting our country’s name
around the world, and especially in the Arab world,” he said. “Egypt’s
monopolistic approach to the dam issue will not be acceptable for us forever.”