Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Egypt Expresses Anger over Ethiopia's Dam Filling Period

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July 4, 2017 - Despite the calm over Ethiopia's grand dam project, Egypt is still trying to use  its advantage to control the technical process at the heart of the Ethiopian Dam, according to an article published on Madamasr.
Cairo has recently submitted a draft of a general statement to the basin members regarding Ethiopia's earlier commitment to fill the dams reservoir over a period of five years. The Egyptian government sees the five-year period as less than ideal. According to sources at Egypts Foreign Ministry, the real battle in the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam talks will be fought over the timeframe in which the dam will be filled. It is a battle, the sources say, which Egypt has to win decisively by pushing the time period to seven years, if it hopes to minimize expected damage.
According to diplomatic sources, the draft of the formal statement submitted in Uganda was only part of Egypts wider aims to intervene in the political process surrounding the dam's construction.
Earlier this year, Ethiopia sought to persuade Egypt to sign a bilateral agreement that would have cemented terms to fill the dam over a five-year period. It was a proposal that Cairo had initially judged to be sensible, before the majority of concerned parties agreed that Cairo should not go forward with an agreement that would have stemmed any remaining legal right to contest Ethiopias lack of commitment to the cooperative framework on the technical procedures of the construction of the dam and the test filling of its reservoir.
Ethiopian sources, as cited in the privately owned Al-Shorouk newspaper, state that Addis Ababa is preparing to begin to fill the Renaissance Dams reservoir next July over a five-year period, without waiting for the completion of the technical study conducted by the French consulting companies, which is trained on testing the dam's effect on the water flow from the Blue Nile to the High Dam lake.
This decision has not gone unaddressed by the Egyptian government. A source at the Foreign Ministry tells Mada Masr that deputy Foreign Minister Hamdy Loza summoned Ethiopias ambassador to Cairo, Taye Atske-Selassie, in early June to send a sharp and clear message regarding Egypts anger at Addis Ababas retreat from its commitment to postpone filling the dam until after an understanding has been reached on a number of technical issues related to the construction of the dam, its capacity and storage mechanism details.
According to the source, the decision to summon Atske-Selassie was meant to serve two goals: First, it was intended to send a clear message that Cairo is alarmed by Ethiopia beginning the trial phase; and second, it aimed to prevent Cairo from shifting its position from containment to escalation, which is the reason the issue was not tackled in the media through the Foreign Ministry spokesperson.
According to a Foreign Ministry authority working on the Renaissance Dam file who spoke to Mada Masr on condition of anonymity, Foreign Minister Sameh Shokry is also aiming to prompt a realignment in the Nile Basin, by affecting change in the position of a sufficient number of member states in the Nile Basin Initiative to re-launch the initiative on a new basis that would see members agree on two issues. First, that none of the member states can start a project on the banks or the pathway of the river without the consensus of member states; and second, that any projects launched by a member state without prior warning will be suspended.
The points which Cairo believes it can garner support from its Nile Basin neighbors remain general, and include seeking to maximize the benefit of Nile resources through joint projects, and talk of the right of all people on the banks of the Nile to life, development and mutual benefit.
The proposal was met with strong support by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, according to the Foreign Ministry source familiar with the Renaissance Dam file, and the result of Shoukrys communication with the Nile Basin countries. The source says that Museveni spoke directly with Sisi days before the summit, promising continued support until an agreement that ensures Egypt is immune to an acute water crisis is reached before Ethiopia begins the process of filling the reservoir in the summer of 2018.
The ministry source, however, says that Museveni's efforts in support of Egypts proposal amounted to little, as the majority of the Nile Basin countries stand behind Ethiopia, for reasons that range from the possible benefit they might secure through favorable electricity export prices the new dam will facilitate to setting a precedent that they could cite if they wanted to pursue water projects on the Nile in the future without having to notify Egypt.
Official figures indicate that Egypts annual per capita water consumption has fallen from 2,526 cubic meters in 1947 to 663 cubic meters in 2013, placing the country below the United Nations water security line. The UN forecasts that Egypt will be in a state of water scarcity by 2025, when average consumption will fall to 500 cubic meters per capita.
Egypt announced its decision to freeze its membership in the Nile Basin Initiative in 2010 after five upstream member states signed a Cooperative Framework Agreement that would reallocate Nile water quotas without Egypts involvement. The parties to the agreement asserted that the framework by which Egypt is allocated 56 billion cubic meters of water per year was signed in the 1950s, before most of the concerned states gained their independence.
The five signatories to the NBI in 2010 were Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Kenya. The following year, Burundi joined the agreement, taking the number of Nile Basin Agreement members states party to the NBI to six and thereby ensuring a majority that could push for a new framework agreement, a move which Egypt rejects  to come into effect once each country's parliament adopts the international deal.
Source:- Madamasr

Ethiopian World Heritage site, Simien National Park no longer in danger

Krakow, Poland, 4 July—The World Heritage Committee meeting in Krakow has decided to remove Simien National Park from the List of World Heritage in Danger in recognition of improvements in its management and of measures taken to reduce overgrazing and visitor impact.
The World Heritage Committee welcomed Ethiopia’s commitment in building an alternative road to alleviate the disturbance of traffic on the main road that crosses the property, reduce cattle overgrazing and visitor impact. The Committee furthermore welcomed the stabilization of the site’s endemic animal populations of, notably, Walia ibex and Gelada baboons.
Massive erosion over the years on the Ethiopian plateau has created one of the most spectacular landscapes in the world, with jagged mountain peaks, deep valleys and sharp precipices dropping some 1,500 m. Simien National Park is home to extremely rare animal species.
Inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1978, the site was added to the List of World Heritage in Danger in 1996 due to the impact of a new road across it, excessive cattle grazing, agricultural encroachment and a drop in Walia ibex, Simien fox and other large mammal populations.
The List of World Heritage in Danger is designed to inform the international community of conditions, which threaten the very characteristics for which a property was inscribed on the World Heritage List, and to encourage corrective action. Typical threats that lead to danger listing include armed conflict, natural disaster, unplanned urban developments, poaching and pollution
The 41st session of the World Heritage Committee, which opened on 2 July, continues until 12 July.

Ethiopia first lady elected president of African first ladies

Madam Roman Tesfaye, wife of Ethiopian Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, has been elected President of the Organization of African First Ladies against HIV/AIDS (OAFLA).
The election took place during a meeting of the group on the sidelines of the 29th African Union (A.U.) summit in Ethiopia. It is, however, the 19th Ordinary General Assembly of the OAFLA.
Until Tesfaye’s election, the post was held by first lady of Ghana. Her vice-president will be Burkinabe first lady, Adjoavi Sika Kabore.
 
Mrs Roman Tesfaye, First Lady of Ethiopia and newly elected president of OAFLA
Wife Of the Nigerian President Mrs Aisha Muhammadu Buhari
First Lady of Central African Republic Mme Brigitte Touadera
Madam Hinda Deby Itno First Lady of Chad
First Lady of Ghana Mrs. Rebecca Akufo-Addo
First Lady of Malawi Dr Gertrude Mutharika
First Lady of Mali Madame Keita A. Maiga
First Lady of Zambia H.E. Madam Esther Lungu
OAFLA have at its meetings recommitted to their fight to make Africa a continent free of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) as well as maternal and child mortality.
At its 17th Assembly meeting in Kigali last year, the group stressed the need to continue its advocacy for increased investment in the health system; accelerate advocacy for enhanced health education; and to support youth and civil society in policy and program initiatives that promote young women’s well-being as leaders and agents of social change in collaboration with the African Union Commission (AUC) and national governments.
They also committed to continue to ensure the launch of the campaign to End Child Marriage in all their countries.
Read more here

Chinese President Xi extends congratulations on convening of 29th AU summit

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Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday sent a message of congratulations to African countries and peoples on the convening of the 29th African Union (AU) summit in Addis Ababa of Ethiopia.
In the congratulatory message, Xi noted the AU is a banner for unity and self-strengthening of Africa. The AU has actively promoted African integration and has prompted African countries to speak with one voice on major global and regional issues, making remarkable achievements, he added.
Xi voiced sincere hope that the AU will lead African countries to keep making greater achievements in the cause of pursuing peace and development.
Important early harvests have been reaped in implementing the outcomes of the Johannesburg summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), which has contributed to the economic and social development of Africa, Xi stressed.
Xi said the Chinese side will continue to adhere to the principles of its African policy — sincerity, practical results, affinity and good faith, will uphold the values of friendship, justice and shared interests, and will actively promote alignment of the Ten Major China-Africa Cooperation Programs and the Belt and Road Initiative with the AU’s Agenda 2063, to promote in-depth development of China-Africa comprehensive strategic cooperative partnership in the greater interest of Chinese and African peoples.
Proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative aims to build trade and infrastructure networks connecting Asia with Europe and Africa on and beyond the ancient Silk Road routes. It comprises the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road. Read more here

Zimbabwe’s Mugabe makes a $1m donation to the AU Foundation

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Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe on Monday gave a donation of $1 million to help capacitate the African Union Foundation during the opening ceremony of the 29th assembly of the AU in Ethiopia’s Addis Ababa.
The donation according to the President Mugabe was raised through the auction of more than 300 head of cattle owned by, him following a pledge he made to the African Union in 2015.
Mugabe recommended the use of innovative solutions to fund Africa’s development agenda and called on all Africans to come together and build the continent “brick by brick, stone by stone”.
The AU for years has been spending money that has been financed by donors including the European Union, World Bank and governments of wealthy non-African countries. This according to Mugabe has allowed big powers to interfere in the work of the AU.
“Africa needs to finance its own programmes. Institutions like the AU cannot rely on donor funding as the model is not sustainable,” Mugabe said in comments broadcast on Zimbabwe’s state television.
“This humble gesture on Zimbabwe’s part has no universal application but it demonstrates what is possible when people apply their minds to tasks before them.”
African leaders in July 2016 agreed in principle to charge a 0.2 percent levy on some exports to help finance AU operations. Read more here
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