Arab News

Egypt blames Ethiopia for failure to resolve Renaissanc­e Dam crisis

A pact had been reached in Washington that Addis Ababa agreed only to reject it later, says Cairo

- Mohammed Abu Zaid Cairo

Egypt has blamed Ethiopia for the failure of US efforts to resolve the Renaissanc­e Dam crisis, a day after President Donald Trump weighed in on the dispute and suggested that Egypt might “blow up” the structure.

Egypt’s minister of water resources and irrigation, Mohamed AbdelAty, said a pact had been reached in Washington that Addis Ababa agreed to only to reject it later.

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam, set to become Africa’s largest hydropower plant, has been a source of tension between Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan for years.

Egypt depends on the Nile for almost all of its irrigation and drinking water and sees the dam as an existentia­l threat. Ethiopia, however, sees the dam as essential for its developmen­t. Egypt and Sudan fear the dam could cause water shortages, and Sudan is also concerned about the structure’s safety.

“Every country has its priorities and pursues its interests,” AbdelAty said. “Sudan cares about the safety of the dam, and we are primarily interested in cooperatio­n during periods of drought. And Ethiopia is interested in generating electricit­y. The goals are clear and every country has its own agenda.”

Talks between the three countries about the controvers­ial multibilli­on dollar project have made little progress in resolving outstandin­g issues.

The minister said Egypt was trying to reach an agreement and was open to cooperatin­g at all levels.

“We have a political will for cooperatio­n and regional integratio­n in order to achieve the prosperity of the people of the three countries. There must be cooperatio­n that paves the way

for donors and funders to link the Nile Basin countries. The political will exists at the highest level in the Egyptian state with the aim of reaching an agreement on the Renaissanc­e Dam.”

Trump had called on Sudanese Prime Minister Abdullah Hamdok to reach an amicable solution, saying he had brokered an agreement to solve the issue but that Ethiopia violated it. This breach led to a cut in aid, Trump added as he warned Addis Ababa it would not receive aid unless it stuck to the agreement.

“The situation is very dangerous because Egypt will not be able to live this way, and they will end up blowing up the dam. I have said it, and I say it again, they will blow up that dam, they have to do something,” Trump remarked. Egypt’s former irrigation minister, Muhammad Nasreddin Allam, wrote on Facebook: “Trump clarifies the Egyptian leadership’s position on the Renaissanc­e Dam, its lack of acceptance of the Ethiopian demands and its readiness for military interventi­on to preserve our water security, considerin­g that this is a green light from Trump for Egypt to strike the Renaissanc­e Dam.”

Ethiopian Foreign Minister Gedu Andargache­w summoned the US ambassador, Michael Raynor, to clarify Trump’s comments.

“It is unacceptab­le for a US president to incite a war between Ethiopia and Egypt,” Andargache­w said. “The incitement to war between Ethiopia and Egypt does not reflect the long-term partnershi­p and strategic alliance between Ethiopia and the United States. It is also unacceptab­le in the internatio­nal law that governs relations between countries.” Cairo and Khartoum want a legally binding agreement that guarantees adequate flows of water and a legal mechanism to resolve the dispute before the dam starts operating, but Ethiopia insists on the dam’s completion without an agreement.

 ?? AFP ?? A general view of the Saddle Dam, part of Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam, currently a bone of contention between Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan.
AFP A general view of the Saddle Dam, part of Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam, currently a bone of contention between Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan.

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