After
all attempts to solve the Egyptian-Ethiopian crisis over the
Renaissance Dam at the negotiating table ended in failure after a third
round of negotiations on Jan. 4, with Egypt withdrawing from the
discussions and conferences being held in Khartoum, there is now talk at
the governmental level about internationalizing the issue. At the same
time, Egypt is witnessing rising popular demands to resort to the UN
Security Council to establish Egypt’s right to veto the establishment of
the Renaissance Dam, given the potential danger it represents to
Egyptian water security.
After negotiations broke down between Cairo and Addis Ababa regarding
the Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, the Egyptian government is considering
internationalizing the issue through filing a complaint with
international bodies.
Khalid Wasif, the official spokesman for the minister of irrigation
and water resources, revealed to Al-Monitor that Egypt has “begun to
explore international channels for setting up alternative diplomatic and
political tracks to ward off the dangers that might afflict the country
if the Renaissance Dam is built, in light of the announced
specifications of the dam.” He emphasized, “Egypt will not allow the dam
to be built and will move to rally international pressure to prevent it
from being funded. Moreover, Cairo will work [to secure] a public
declaration by the international community rejecting the dam’s
completion, in the absence of [Ethiopian] guarantees that Egypt and
Egyptians will not suffer any loss in water security, nor will the other
states of the Nile Basin. Egypt has rights guaranteed by international
law and agreements, which the Ethiopian side is not respecting.”
Wasif added, “According to existing agreements governing the river —
which require upriver states to notify Egypt in advance and obtain its
consent prior to embarking on any projects that would affect the Nile
sources — Egypt’s is the stronger legal position. Yet, Egypt has
nevertheless insisted upon resolving the issue in a friendly manner,
through reciprocal dialogue with the Ethiopian side, devoid of any
escalation. But the government in Addis Ababa has shown no appreciation
for this fact. Thus, Egypt has refused to continue the latest Khartoum
meetings, given Ethiopia’s insistence on not providing the necessary
guarantees that Egypt’s share of the water supply will remain secure.”
Rida al-Dimak, the director of the Center for Water Projects at Cairo
University’s Engineering College, told Al-Monitor, “The development of
alternative supplies of water must be accelerated, to replace the water
that will be lost as a result of the construction of the Renaissance
Dam. Foremost among these alternative sources is the exchange of
wellspring [water] with the [Democratic Republic of the] Congo,
transferring water from the Congo River to the Nile, so as to guarantee
that the amount of water available to Egypt remains constant.”
Dimak warned against the completion of the Renaissance Dam according
to its current specifications, stating that it would constitute a
violation of human rights. The social and environmental effects, he
explained, must be taken into consideration whenever a new water project
is built, in accordance with inviolable international conventions. Some
international reports have confirmed that the Ethiopian dam will result
in a shortage of drinking water and destruction of a great deal of
Egyptian agricultural land. This, he states, provides the foundation for
Egypt’s right to object to the dam in international forums.
For his part, former Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources
Muhammad Nasr al-Din Allam said in an interview with Al-Monitor that the
Egyptian government no longer has any alternative but to move quickly
to take steps toward international escalation. The first of these, he
states, should be to lodge an official protest against the government in
Addis Ababa, formally declaring Egypt’s rejection of the project.
“This right is guaranteed to us by old agreements signed and
recognized internationally, and which were conditioned upon notifying
Egypt in advance before any Nile-related project was established. This
protest ought to be followed by the lodging of an official complaint
with the UN to establish Egypt’s position and [remonstrate against]
Ethiopian intransigence, as well as to formally demand the formation of
an international fact-finding committee to study the points of
disagreement between Egypt and Ethiopia. These points include the dam’s
capacity, the period of time needed to fill it, [details concerning its]
operation, the project’s unsound and unsafe construction and the lack
of rigorous Ethiopian studies demonstrating that the dam is not
vulnerable to collapse, something that would have disastrous
consequences for both Egypt and Sudan,” Allam noted.
Allam stressed the need for Egypt to demand that construction on the
Ethiopian dam be halted at once, until the fact-finding committee
completes its work. According to Allam, this would require “a period of,
at most, three to six months.” Moreover, he added, “A copy of the
committee’s report should be brought before the UN, to demonstrate the
damage that the dam would wreak upon Egypt, which should then head to
the Security Council.”
In an interview with the daily El Fagr on Jan. 9, Ayman Salama, an
Egyptian expert in international law, stressed that the Egyptian
government would be justified in taking its case to the UN Security
Council, even though “one cannot adopt international arbitration to
settle the crisis, since that would require the assent of both parties
to the conflict to adopt this formulation of crisis resolution. The
Ethiopian government has indicated that it will be highly intransigent
on this issue. International arbitration has therefore become extremely
unlikely. But Egypt might be able to turn to the Security Council. This,
however, would require the preparation of a file containing documented
facts of legal and material evidence of the harm that this dam would
incur, both to Egypt and to its vital interests. The issue must be shown
to threaten the peace and security of the two countries. [If
successful], a number of measures could then be taken by the Security
Council to compel Ethiopia to meet Egyptian demands.”
Egypt’s National Defense Council has already held an emergency
session on Jan. 8, headed by President Adly Mansour and dedicated to
reviewing internal developments and the domestic Egyptian security
situation. With the irrigation and water resources minister in
attendance, the council also examined the latest developments concerning
Ethiopia’s Renaissance Dam and the steps being taken on that front to
preserve Egyptian water security. It also noted the steps devoted to
reducing or eliminating any negative effects that the soon-to-be-built
dam might have on Egypt or the other states of the Nile Basin. The
council also stressed that Egypt’s water rights must not be squandered,
and that it would not accept any undermining of Egyptian national
security.
These steps, and Egyptian moves toward international escalation and
the internationalization of the Renaissance Dam crisis, follow years of
Egyptian insistence upon solving the crisis through mutual dialogue at
the negotiating table.
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