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Kenyan MP recommends threatening war on Ethiopia for damming river

Kenyan MP Recommends Threatening War on Ethiopia for Damming River

Jimma Times

Kenyan member of parliament representing Turkana central constituency, Ekuwe Ethuro, recommended the government to threaten war on Ethiopia for starting dam constructions at the Omo river. Local officials indicated the Kenyan Lake Turkana's survival is at risk because of Ethiopia's development operations up stream.

According to Kenyan media, the country's Water Minister is discussing with the Ethiopian government on how to solve this issue and reach a lasting agreement. The Kenyan MP, however, asked why the Kenyan government is not using Egypt's policy of putting pressure on Ethiopia by threatening to go to war if Ethiopia uses its water resources.

Through out the last century, Egypt has threatened war on Ethiopia over the Nile river flow, including threats by the Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1970 when Ethiopia proposed construction of a dam on its Lake Tana on the Blue Nile. The statements by the Kenyan MP come in a time when riparian countries like Tanzania have began to ignore colonial Nile treaties that favor Egypt, in order to build hydroelectric power and irrigation projects. Ethiopia contributes around 85 percent of the Nile flow, an amount that rises over 90 during flood period, but Egypt dominates the Nile resources.

NILE AND FAMINES

The Nile Basin countries are Uganda, Sudan, Tanzania, Rwanda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Egypt, DRC and Burundi. Egypt is the most downstream riparian country and Eritrea contributes relatively small to the basin area. While Uganda serves as a "bridge country" as a downstream for Tanzania and upsteam for Egypt, the Ethiopian highlands provide around 85% of the Nile flow. Despite these share of contributions to the river, Egypt dominates the consumption of the Nile resources and has repeatedly warned that it will use military force against the other Nile Basin countries, more aggressively so since the Unites States began subsidizing Egypt's armed forces with around $2 billion annual military aid nearly four decades ago. Egypt also benefits from colonial agreements created in early 1900s by the British adminstration in Cairo as well as from a 1959 treaty between Egypt and Sudan which gave 75% of the Nile resource to Egypt and banned large-scale development projects on the Nile river by riparian countries like Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia.

The Egyptian domination and the disproportional usage of the Nile has historically angered these African nations south of the Nile, particularly Ethiopia which has suffered from famines in 1973 and 1984 that killed hundreds of thousands Ethiopians and made the country's name increasingly synonymous with famine. The inability to use the Nile for large-scale projects has meant that Ethiopia's agriculture production, which over two-thirds of the population depends on, is at the mercy of erratic seasonal rains. The UN declared this year that another drought, due to a shortage of rain in Ethiopia, requires emergency food aid for over 10 million Ethiopians.

According to BBC, in his 1997 address to the United Nations, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin said "Ethiopia will not achieve food security until it is no longer dependant on rain-fed agriculture."

"WATER WARS"

Many experts fear an escalation of conflict between Egypt and upsteam Nile countries like Ethiopia. Egypt has made various attempts to secure its grip on the Nile militarily, including Egyptian invasions and brief occupations in the 1800s of the then northern Ethiopian territories at Massawa and the eastern areas around Harar. Egypt also openly helped Somalia's invasion of Ethiopia in 1977, giving modern weapons, military advisors and aid to Somalia during what became known as the Ogaden War.

Former Egyptian Foreign Minister Boutros-Ghali warned in September of this year that the "most urgent problem" facing Egypt today is Ethiopian use of the Nile water. While relations have been less tense recently, Egypt has long succeeded in its policy of destabilizing Ethiopia as a way to weaken Ethiopia economically and politically from using its Nile water resources. During the time of Ethiopian leader Mengistu, Eritrean separatists received political and military support from Egypt while pre-existing ethnic tensions inside Ethiopia have also been exploited by Egypt for decades. Similar to the previous scenario during Mengistu, Ethiopia under Meles Zenawi today is occupied with fighting separatist movements which have weakened the state militarily, poltically and economically.

In addition, a United Nations (UN) Security Council report in 2006 stated that the Islamist movement in Mogadishu has received various forms of support from some Gulf states and Egypt. This Islamist movement led by Al Shabaab, which the American government linked to Al Qaida, also declared its expansionist intentions to annex eastern Ethiopia and eastern Kenyan territories that are populated by ethnic Somalis. A report in November of this year by the McClatchy Newspapers stated that foreigners led by Egyptian military experts "gave weapons instructions to younger fighters" and "enjoyed VIP status" in Al Shabaab military camps in southern Somalia.

Despite these developments, a 2005 BBC report said that more than Egypt's policy of destabilizing Ethiopia, what "prevents Ethiopia from exploiting the Nile waters is a lack of money. [And Ethiopian Prime Minister] Meles blames this on Egypt's long-term opposition to any international funding of large scale irrigation projects on the Nile."  For instance in 1990, Egypt was successful in blocking an African Development Bank loan to Ethiopia for water development project along the Nile.

Demographic and Security analyst Ronald Bleier suggested that one of the reasons for Egypt's successful domination of the Nile is its "timely alliance and support from global superpowers." Accordingly, Ethiopian scholars believe Egypt is recently seeking to make Israel a stakeholder in the future of the Nile river, which would further cripple Ethiopia's chances of getting international funding for large scale projects on the Nile, by influencing the Pro-Israel American foreign policy to block such vital funding. New Egyptian projects along the north Sinai are reportedly aiming to divert sections of the Nile water flow toward Israel.

Many are also not optimstic with the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI), an organization launched in 1999 to promote equitable utilization of the Nile between the various African nations. The NBI is believed to have ignored important problems and focused on minor issues, which could eventually create more mistrust among the Nile Basin states than there existed before the NBI was established.

The solution to this crisis, experts say, is an urgent international move to end geo-political hindrances to funding for the impoverished African states and establish upstream-downstream cooperation that would lead to peaceful and proportional exploitation of the Nile water. One Ethiopian observer told Jimma Times that "Ethiopia can not promise to ignore its biggest natural resource forever."

Ethiopian officials still say that they sympathize with the mostly desert Egypt's concern about losing its economic lifeline if Ethiopia uses its resources, but with over a million Ethiopians having already died due to famines and millions more seeking food aid this year, many believe it is overdue for an effective regional cooperation that genuinely solves the problem from its root cause. Without large-scale dam construction and major irrigation projects for the southern riparian states along the Nile river, analysts expect countries like Kenya and Ethiopia to feud over minor obstacles and smaller resources like Ethiopia's Omo river which feeds Lake Turkana.

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Comments 62 comments for this article
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Added: April 30, 2009. 08:35 AM GMT
To proud egyptian
You are very brave, with bigbrother USA (military aid) in back of you, it is kind of easy. Why do u think the river Nile belongs only to you? Its also the river of Sudan, Ethiopia, and other riperians. The Niles water comes mostly from Ethiopia and Ethiopia has not a right to use it own water. Are u so proud on that?!! Why u don't build other dams and reservois downstream of Asswan?! Then you would have more water for drinking, agriculture and electricity. That would cost a lot of money?!! Hm, thats is the problem, i think. Crying arround "water is ours" and "we will kill u" (hm, Ahmed the dead terrorist) is a lilbit easy,; instead this, work build and invest more money in your watersources. And btw send your F-16s there will be Su-27s and if needed more SU-27s and Migs waiting for them. Don't forget a long distance from Asswan AB to Blue Nile dams, what will you bring enough fuel and some bombs. You will not have air-air missiles or ECM pods and so an easy target for ethiopian yetorplanes and SAM. And many other countrys are supporting Ethiopia, like Russia, China etc. So think about that



Ferenje from Europe
Anonymous
Added: April 05, 2009. 04:27 PM GMT
END OF Ethiopia
BELIEVE me Ethiopia like an insect in front of egypt. You know if egyptians can't find water to drink and start suffering you will find 220 F-16's, Mirage 2000, Refale, Frigates, Submarines, Mine Warfares, Missile Boats and 5,000,000+ soldiers EQUIPPED WITH THE MOST LARGE AND MODERN ARMY IN AFRICA AND MIDDLE EAST will COME and kill for their lifes(the NILE). your government said that they know their's EGYPTIAN SPECIAL FORCES IN Ethiopian forests. DONT EVER TALK LIKE THAT ABOUT EGYPT.
PROUD EGYPTIAN
Added: March 11, 2009. 05:44 AM GMT
My oppinion:
It is Ethiopias right to constract and biuld dams on the Blue Nile, Omo and other rivers. If these dams would have been built decades before, Ethiopia would be the strongest country in Africa... Forget the contracts between Egypt and Sudan... 85% of the river water to Egypt and 15% to Sudan, what kind of ruling is that?!!! Evil, forget it. In case of Omo, i think Ethiopia should try to hold a goog relation with Kenya (btw also with South Sudan).
a ferenje
Added: March 07, 2009. 07:51 PM GMT
omo river
i do not support the idea of war too.because one wrong can not justify another.but at the same time ,the ethiopian government and its development partners should not comprimise with the livehoods of the many communities living down stream of river omo and around lake turkana.etom,turkana,lokitung kenya.
icant
Added: February 12, 2009. 02:12 PM GMT
What about the national problem?
This analysis, though useful and detailed,fails to give a needed critique of the internal politics of Ethiopia. In short, it continues the age-old victim mentality of Ethiopian scholars and political leaders when it comes to the Nile.(see the complaint of the PM above). Harnessing the Nile for domestic development, above all, requires a strong political and economic presence by the ruling class or the governing caste in Ethiopia. Where there is a stable power arrangement inside the country, there is neither the lack of money nor the diplomatic skill to attain the desired goals. To give you recent examples; the Ethiopian government has been skillful enough in manipulating global geo-political factors to stall the border demarcation with Eritrea despite the latter's legal victory. Secondly,the country has been able to turn itself into a leading floral industry in Africa almost overnight. Do you know that almost all of the captains of the industry kick started with a 70% loan from the state coffers. There is no such thing as lack of money for Nile project at a national level. We are not talking about a household economy.The issue is, once again, whether we have the whereabouts to build a reasonably fair and accountable political system.
Anonymous
Added: January 30, 2009. 07:24 PM GMT
Ethiopia
i think Ethiopi should start using the river very largely, because of Egypt there should not die people because of femane.who is Egypt, it is not God or something, it is a normal country, no one can not fear this country.SO there is people dieing because of femane, so Egypt to be getting richer and Ethiopia getting poorer no way it does not work like that, if they don't agree with using the river equaly , if they want they can start a war they know Ethiopia who is? no one can not beat Ethiopia by anything.
Ethiopian proud man
Added: January 21, 2009. 09:42 PM GMT
f**k egypt, them arabs, nile belongs to black africa..ETHIOPIA
Anonymous
Added: December 30, 2008. 12:14 PM GMT
AU Foreign policy
Kenya forms an alliance with Ethiopia, and the power balance in Afica is tipped against Zimbabwes Mugabe.
Kenya goes against Ethiopia and the balance of Power in Africa favours Mugabe.
The people of Zimbabwe deserve a break. The people of Kenya must make nice with the people of Ethiopia.
Of course making nice with Ethiopia flies in the face of the KANU view of the way forward, and falls neatly into the realms of Odingas approach. The delicate balance of power within Kenya must also be considered.
How do we avoid stepping on each others toes within nations as well as between nations?
We in Africa have 53 Nations. We have a mighty complicated path to follow.
It is time for an era of simplification....
Anonymous
Added: December 25, 2008. 02:00 PM GMT
no war!
the recommendation of the kenyan MP Kenyan member of parliament representing Turkana central constituency, Ekuwe Ethuro,is very shameful and it leads to bleeding (loss of lives)so they should go back to their normal condition because no gain from WAR!!!We Africans want BREAD!!! No pure water from WAR!!!.



Mesaud Mohammed

Ethiopia,Tigray,Mekelle

Anonymous
Added: December 23, 2008. 02:21 PM GMT
if there is war there is no more OMO river
Kenyan member of parliament representing Turkana central constituency, Ekuwe Ethuro,I think they don't know how war can destroy many lives specially of childrens,and their mothers,we Africans must think about our economic development,our progress,we mus STOP War. Mesaud
Anonymous
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