Friday, March 28, 2014

Renaissance Dam trouble: Ethiopia lashes out at Eritrea, Egypt


The Renaissance dam will flood 1,680 square kilometers of forest in northwest Ethiopia (an area about four times the size of Cairo), displace approximately 20,000 people in Ethiopia, and create a reservoir that will hold around 70 billion cubic meters of water – equivalent to the entire annual flow of the Blue Nile at the Sudan border.
March 27, 2014, ADDIS ABABA (Turkish Press) – An Ethiopian foreign ministry spokesman has lashed out at longstanding rival Eritrea, accusing the latter of destabilizing the East Africa region, while also blasting Egypt for the latter’s “malicious” media campaign against Ethiopia’s multibillion-dollar hydroelectric dam project.
“Eritrea’s involvement in regional conflicts has been the case for long now,” Ambassador Dina Mufti told foreign journalists at a weekly press briefing on Thursday.
According to Mufti, Eritrea has played a role in the ongoing conflict in South Sudan.

“We have circumstantial evidence of Eritrea’s involvement [in the South Sudan crisis],” the spokesman said.
Tensions between Addis Ababa and Asmara have persisted since a bloody two-year border war – in which tens of thousands were killed – ended in 2000.
As for the row with Egypt over the Nile dam, Mufti said Cairo had launched a media campaign aimed at turning international opinion against the dam project.
“The project is a regional project,” he said. “The project will not hurt the interest of Egypt. Rather, it benefits Egypt and other countries of the region.”
Egypt’s alleged media campaign, according to Mufti, “won’t be in the interest of Egypt and [in the interest of] the people of Egypt.”
Egypt, he added, had walked out of a tripartite committee with Ethiopia and Sudan that had been formed to assess the dam’s potential impact.
Subsequent efforts to bring Egypt back to the tripartite negotiations, said Mufti, had failed to bear fruit.
The mega-dam project has caused tensions with Egypt, which fears a possible reduction of its traditional share of Nile water.
Addis Ababa, however, insists the project will benefit downstream states Sudan and Egypt, both of which will be invited to purchase electricity generated by the dam.
Source: Turkish Press     source  (  http://ayyaantuu.com/horn-of-africa-news/renaissance-dam-trouble-ethiopia-lashes-out-at-eritrea-egypt/   )

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