Africa
Tension as Egypt rejects new deal for Nile water
Even as down-stream countries meet to enact a new deal on sharing of the waters of the world’s longest river, Ethiopia launched a new hydro dam on Blue Nile. Above, a section of the Nile River. Photo/FILE
Posted Tuesday, April 27 2010 at 18:42
In Summary
- Upstream countries hope to end pact that gives lion’s share of resources to Cairo
CAIRO, Tuesday
In arid Egypt, officials have long angered fellow Nile Basin countries by clinging to colonial-era water treaties giving it rights to the lion’s share of water flowing down the world’s longest river.
But upstream nations desperate for development are hoping to break with the past, threatening to shut regional heavyweight Egypt out of a new pact and potentially deepening an already bitter struggle for water resources across this parched region.
“This is a crisis in Egypt’s relations with Nile Basin countries,” said Gamal Soltan, head of the Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies.
The feud could also upset the balance between poor upstream nations and Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous nation, where climate change threatens a fragile farm sector and population growth may outstrip water resources as early as 2017.
Revise water pacts
The latest chapter in the long-running feud over waters from the Nile, worshipped as a deity in ancient Egypt, came when upstream countries declared after a water meeting in Sharm El-Sheikh this month that they would launch separate talks since Egypt and Sudan refused to revise water pacts dating to 1929.
“Egypt’s historic rights to Nile waters are a matter of life and death. We will not compromise them,” Moufid Shehab, minister of legal and assembly affairs, told parliament after the talks.
The 1929 deal, brokered on one side by British colonial powers in Africa, gives Egypt 55.5 billion cubic metres a year, the biggest share of a flow of some 84 billion cubic metres.
It also gives Cairo the power to veto dams and other water projects in upstream countries that include six of the world’s poorest nations.
“We will not sign on to any agreement that does not clearly state and acknowledge our historical rights,” Egyptian Water Minister Mohamed Nasreddin Allam said after the meeting.
But analysts say Egypt, eager to style itself as a leader of both Arab and African nations to enhance its global clout, must improve ties with upstream countries that in the future may take on greater economic and commercial importance.
“Egypt has tried in the past to complicate the issue ...They are dragging their heels,” Shimeles Kemal, spokesman for the government of Ethiopia, source of the Blue Nile.
Egypt and Sudan “are pushing for a position that would negate everything we’ve achieved in years of talks and negotiations”, said Isaac Musumba, Uganda’s state minister for regional cooperation.
Upstream states have invited Egypt and Sudan to take part in the new deal, whose legal standing would be uncertain, but on their terms.
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Submitted by rofiPosted April 29, 2010 08:10 AM
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Submitted by Bziegnew
Wait Egypt is playing if it can not help preserve environment around the lake and here they think they own the water source treaty,is out dated and is on life support EA Countries should not even talk about the treaty, let it go, if they want it they will approach politely.Its EA state trying to sustain environment so the lake can continue to have water.rivers feeding this lake and their sources, runs through communities and they should be harvested for local developments.This Egypt thing is a big joke and laughably.
Posted April 29, 2010 05:15 AM -
Submitted by julius babu
Treaty for what?To use water from East africa? East africa should trade water for oil,and formost use the commodity to irrigate the land in East african. why is water soo scare in nairobi????.why care for people who dont care for u?
Posted April 29, 2010 04:28 AM -
Submitted by bobcat
It is in Kenya where the govt. fights its people to conserve the rivers that lead to the Nile (Mau) it is us who pay the price to conserve the environment, they can not just enjoy the benefits, we must assert ourselves and if we all agree, Egypt has no choice but to negotiate
Posted April 29, 2010 03:12 AM -
Submitted by njengah
It is stupid to even sit down with these pharaohs and discuss the Nile. Kenya should just dig up dams in our rivers and irrigate our desserts too! What are they going to do when we use the water from rivers located inside our own country??
Posted April 29, 2010 02:25 AM




RSS
Oil and water are both natural resources. Let Egypt and Sudan exchange so many barrels of oil for so many million cubic metres of water which the sub-Saharan countries need and they need water. It's a win/win otherwise, the sub-Saharan countries will not feel any obligations towards preserving catchment areas etc. and in the long run, Egypt will surely suffer.