February 26, 2013 (KHARTOUM) – A senior Saudi Arabian official
unleashed a barrage of attack against Ethiopia saying that the Horn of
Africa nation is posing a threat to the Nile water rights of Egypt and
Sudan.
- Saudi deputy defense minister Khalid Bin Sultan (Al-Riyadh)
"The
[Grand] Renaissance dam has its capacity of flood waters reaching more
than 70 billion cubic meters of water, and is located at an altitude of
700 meters and if it collapsed then Khartoum will drown completely and
the impact will even reach the Aswan Dam,"
the Saudi deputy defense minister Khalid Bin Sultan said at the meetings of the Arab Water Council in Cairo.
the Saudi deputy defense minister Khalid Bin Sultan said at the meetings of the Arab Water Council in Cairo.
"Egypt is the most affected party from the
Ethiopian Renaissance dam because they have no alternative water source
compared to other Nile Basin countries and the establishment of the dam
12 kilometers from the Sudanese border is for political plotting rather
than for economic gain and constitutes a threat to Egyptian and Sudanese
national security "the Saudi official said.
Egypt fears that
the Nile dam will reduce the flow of the river’s waters further
downstream and Addis Ababa has long complained that Cairo was pressuring
donor countries and international lenders to withhold funding.
An
international panel of experts is set to announce its findings on the
impact of Ethiopia’s Grand Renaissance Dam on the Nile’s flow in May
2013.
The Saudi deputy defense minister went further saying that Ethiopia is keen on harming Arab nations.
"There
are fingers messing with water resources of Sudan and Egypt which are
rooted in the mind and body of Ethiopia. They do not forsake an
opportunity to harm Arabs without taking advantage of it" Prince Khalid
said.
"The establishment of the dam leads to the transfer of water
supply from the front of Lake Nasser to the Ethiopian plateau, which
means full Ethiopian control of every drop of water, as well as
[causing] an environmental imbalance stirring seismic activity in the
region as a result of the massive water weight laden with silt withheld
in front of the dam, estimated by experts at more than 63 billion
tonnes," he added.
The Saudi official added that Nile basin
countries calling for reallocating Nile water shares is a "real threat"
to Egypt’s future.
"The information is alarming and it is
important that we do not underestimate the danger at the moment and its
repercussions in the future," he said.
It is unusual for Saudi
officials known for being composed to make such damning criticism of
other countries. It is not clear whether today’s remarks indicates
hidden tensions with Ethiopia.
Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda,
Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo, along with Ethiopia,
signed an agreement to overturn British-colonial-era agreements dating
back to 1929.
These gave Egypt and Sudan 90 percent of the Nile’s
water flow and the power of veto over dam-building, even though 85
percent of the river’s water flows from the Ethiopian highlands.
Ethiopia
and the upstream states contend they need more water because of
burgeoning populations, industrialization and agricultural projects.
Water
needs are expected to rise as the Nile basin population is projected to
reach 654 million by 2030, up from 372 million in 2005, according to UN
estimates.
(ST)
No comments:
Post a Comment