Egypt is not opposed to the construction of the Renaissance Dam in
Ethiopia, or to any other development project, as long as it does not
impair Egypt's interests, the Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources
Mohamed Bahaa Eddin said on Saturday.
"A tripartite committee involving Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia is
studying the effects that building the [Renaissance] Dam would have,"
Bahaa Eddin added in a press statement Saturday, after President Mohamed
Morsy and Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn met on the
sidelines of the African Summit.
Bahaa Eddin refused to comment on Addis Ababa's insistence on
continuing work on the dam despite the fact that the committee has not
concluded its study.
"Talks broached the subject of the Renaissance Dam project and the
Ethiopian prime minister emphasized his country's eagerness to
prioritize Egypt’s interests above their own," Bahaa Eddin said.
"The Renaissance [Dam] project is a regional project that benefits
everyone, including Egypt and Sudan," Bahaa Eddin added. He stressed
that the project would not harm the interests of either Egypt or Sudan.
Bahaa Eddin's statement drew the ire of journalists because it is
well-known that Egypt opposes the construction of the Renaissance Dam,
as it would diminish its share of water from the Nile River.
In order to generate electricity, in April 2011 Ethiopia launched the
project to build the Millennium dam, or “Grand Ethiopian Renaissance
Dam,” on the Blue Nile, one of the tributaries of the Nile River. Cairo
fears that the dam will reduce its share of Nile water, while Addis
Ababa denies that the dam will have any such negative effect.
Discussing this issue is Morsy’s top priority on his current visit to
Ethiopia, presidential office spokesperson Ehab Fahmy said.
The president will discuss the water issue with Ethiopian officials
and other African leaders participating in the African Summit, Fahmy
told Egyptian state-run television from Addis Ababa on Saturday.
Egypt and Sudan signed an agreement in 1959 that provided the former
with a share of 51 billion square meters of water per year, and the
latter with a share of 18 billion square meters.
In April 2010, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania signed a
new agreement in Entebbe, Uganda, which redistributed shares of Nile
water. Egypt and Sudan refused to sign the accord, declaring that it was
non-binding. The deal was approved after Burundi signed the agreement
in March 2011.
http://www.egyptindependent.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment