Arab Times

Swedish doc freed

3 nations to study filling of Nile dam

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ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, May 16, (Agencies): Officials from Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan early Wednesday announced progress in talks on what will be Africa’s largest hydroelect­ric dam.

The foreign ministers of Egypt and Ethiopia and Sudan’s water resources minister said they will set up a scientific study group to consult on the filling of Ethiopia’s $5 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam on the Nile River. They also confirmed that leaders from the three nations will meet every six months for consultati­ons.

The latest talks came after a round of negotiatio­ns last week in Cairo failed. More high-level talks are set for July 3 in Cairo.

Egypt fears too much of the Nile’s waters could be retained each year, affecting its agricultur­e. Ethiopia maintains that the dam’s constructi­on will not reduce Egypt’s share of the water and that it will help Ethiopia’s developmen­t, pointing out that 60 million of its citizens don’t have access to electricit­y. “We have charted a road map that, if successful, will be able to break difficulti­es that we have been facing,” Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry told reporters after the marathon talks.

“One step forward to Ethiopia,” the country’s foreign affairs spokesman, Meles Alem, told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

The mega-dam is now more than 63 percent complete. Once complete it will generate about 6,400 megawatts, more than doubling Ethiopia’s current production of 4,000 megawatts.

Ethiopian authoritie­s on Tuesday released an Ethiopian-born Swedish cardiologi­st who has been in jail since 2013 on corruption and terrorism charges, his family members said.

Fikru Maru, who founded a heart hospital in the capital Addis Ababa, was held in custody on suspicion of graft, but in October 2016 he was sentenced to four years and eight months for tax fraud related to his business.

Though he was acquitted of corruption afterward, the 67-year old was then charged in December, 2016, with involvemen­t in causing a fire that ripped through a prison complex and killed dozens of inmates in September of that year.

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