Old wine
into new wineskins
BY WORKU BELACHEW
A 45-member Egyptian delegation led
by Head of Diplomatic Institute Ambassador Alaa El-Hadeedy is said to
have arrived in Addis Ababa to meet various key personalities which
have direct and indirect engagement with the issue of the Nile Basin.
A matter of interest for this writer
is, however, what special value would this delegation add into Nile
politics, particularly the construction of the Ethiopian Grand
Renaissance Dam (GERD) other than sophisticating, if at all they
succeed, the unique opportunity created for cooperation among the
basin nations as a result of the GERD construction. May be the
delegation can have a good vacation in one of the capitals of the
world with the highest altitudes.
But, one needs to see the writer's
thesis with a kind heart, meaning this article has no intention to
undermine discussions held between countries of the Nile Basin to
resolve differences. Indeed, if there is a real interest to bring
issues to table, the result is immense. And this is what we call “For
African Problem, African Solution.”
Notwithstanding that, the previous
track record of Egyptian delegates—who dealt with GERD— has left
enough rooms to see the newly arrived delegation with suspicion, the
writer believes. Frankly speaking, the other delegations were with
too many cracks even within themselves. In the first place, apart
from treating main issues they stood for, previous delegates served
their personal interest. This could be, of course, intentionally to
deter discussions into a wrong path and to confuse the international
community. For instance, during the third round of talks the trio
held in Khartoum in which representatives convened to discuss the
implementation of recommendation given by the previous International
Panel of Experts (IPoE) which studied the Dam's impact to downstream
countries. (It is to be recalled that IPoE concluded as no
significant threat on them.) But, the Egyptian delegate's seemed to
have forgotten why they were in Khartoum. Members of the delegate
were deliberately throwing irrelevant agendas to table such as
discussing Cooperative Framework of Agreement (CFA) and hiring
International Experts (IE). How can representatives of three
countries, Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt, discuss the already signed
CFA. It is clearly indicated on the CFA's preamble as basin nations
(10 Nations) has recognized the Nile River and its natural resources
and environment
as “the property of Nile Basin Nations.” This means only three
countries cannot discuss and decide on the CFA and it was not also
the right place to discuss it. No confusion, the delegate knew this
hard fact but were trying to disturb the whole process. Again same
delegation were tightly asking to hire an international expert's
panel that oversees a trio panel of national experts knowing that
matters which this trio would fail to resolve can be referred to
respective water ministers and get decided.
Egyptian delegates including those in
the IPoE who signed the consensus report of the study also
championed in disseminating an unofficial and distorted versions of
the report. They told their favourite media ill famed stories that
may inflict conflict. We witnessed a lot after that including phrases
like “all options are open”, “sabotaging Ethiopia”, the dam
is “a threat to the Arab World”.... Such phrases are undoubtedly
counter-productive for the Basin nations peace and security. But, it
seems what they have preferred.
So, what their delegations were doing
is just making campaigns after campaigns against the GERD Project and
using every opportunity to mislead the international community,
though failing to succeed. It is from this ground that this writer is
questioning what sort of result would the current delegation can
come up with. For sure, each member of the delegation will tell the
world their own version of this visit-
may be, masking the reality on the ground,
when they go back to their country. For them, making fruitful
discussion that is on the equitable usage of Nile waters is
unconstitutional because they vote for maintaining Egypt's
“historic
rights'' which other basin nations, hopefully, perceive it as their
“historic confusion”. It is an article which put discussion in
friction than fruit. They closed their door twice to Nile basin
countries, I believe, once when they refuse to sign the CFA and now
when they proclaim their “historic confusion”. If is not too
hyperbolic, they are leading their people with the mode of the oldest
century risking their National Security on a matter out of their
control.
Countries South of Egypt are
aggressively working to pull millions of people out of poverty. And,
no doubt, they exploit every resource within the reach of their
boundary. Doing so is not a crime by anyone's standards indeed. And
when it comes to cross border rivers and lakes, the customary law
available is the Danube notion of posing no significant harm to
downstream countries. Likewise, downstream countries should not also
harm upstream
countries putting impeding requisites like “historic rights”....
What abides both together is cooperation and equitable use of cross
border rivers and lakes.
Let
go camels while dogs bark
The true arena to discuss cooperation is first
respecting all the basin Nations. It is repeatedly said that the dam
has no significant threat to downstream countries. That is why Sudan
is in good terms with Ethiopia. Egypt's “politicians” and
“scholars” still pose threats to upstream nations with their old
fashioned diplomacy. They are knocking every door loading same issues
but with various delegations. Unless they bring something new that
fosters cooperation, it is only wandering about countries. And
putting old wine into new wineskins, it does nothing. Whatever the
case is the dam's construction is over 30 percent complete. The pace
is on acceleration. Ethiopia is in a point of no return. And Ethiopia
is leaping forward to make its visions reality. Actually, Egyptian
politicians and scholars will never fail campaigning against
Ethiopia. This is not phenomenal. They were over doing it in the past
with different approaches. But, World order has already changed. Now
the thing is adjusting oneself to best fit in the new world order.
That is what Ethiopia has championed and Egyptian politicians and
scholars are failing repeatedly or get it hard to accept.
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I wonder why the Egyptians has no firm stand??!
ReplyDeletethey swing from here to there, because they're afraid of using one option.
DeleteAs usual they are trying be sheep in a skin of wolf. Now their delegates are telling the media to be fair after deploying enough wrongs.
ReplyDelete