Daily Nation Newspaper

Talks to ease Egypt concerns over Nile dam fail

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KHARTOUM - A new round of talks held in Khartoum to ease Egypt's concerns over a controvers­ial dam that Ethiopia is building along the Nile have failed, a Sudanese minister said yesterday.

The foreign ministers and intelligen­ce chiefs of Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan met in Khartoum on Thursday, and after nearly 17 hours of discussion­s they failed to reach an agreement on issues concerning Addis Ababa's ongoing constructi­on of the controvers­ial Grand Renaissanc­e Dam on the Nile.

"We didn't reach an agreement," Sudanese Foreign Minister Ibrahim Ghandour told reporters after the officials of three countries wrapped up their talks held at a luxury ho- tel in Khartoum.

"We spent the whole day talking as ordered by the leaders of the three countries, but we didn't reach an agreement."

"I can't specify what the disagreeme­nts were, but they were technical issues," Ghandour said as his Ethiopian and Egyptian counterpar­ts refused to speak to journalist­s.

Ghandour also said that no new date had been fixed for the next round of talks.

The latest round of discussion had been held after leaders of Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan met in Addis Ababa last month and agreed to break the months long impasse over the dam.

Ethiopia began building the $4bn dam in 2012, but the mega project has triggered tensions primarily with Egypt as Cairo fears that once commission­ed the dam will reduce water supplies from the Nile to Egypt.

Egypt relies almost totally on the Nile for irrigation and drinking water, and says it has "historic rights" to the river, guaranteed by treaties from 1929 and 1959.

Cairo argues that the treaties grant it 87 percent of the Nile's flow, as well as the power to veto upstream projects. It fears that any reduction of water supplies to the biggest Arab country will affect its agricultur­e. Cairo is primarily concerned at the speed at which the dam's reservoir would be filled.

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