Monday, April 21, 2014

Egypt to ‘escalate’ Ethiopian dam dispute

While construction of Africa's largest hydroelectric dam continues apace, downstream neighbour Egypt is crying foul.


Despite the ongoing dispute, construction of the dam is already 30 percent complete [AP]
In the three years since construction began on the 1.8km Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam across the Blue Nile River, Egypt and Ethiopia have been engaged in a war of words over its potential impacts.
Ethiopia believes the massive dam will herald an era of prosperity, spurring growth and attracting foreign currency with the export of power to neighbouring countries. But Egypt has raised concerns about the downstream effects, as the Blue Nile supplies the Nile with about 85 percent of its water.
Both sides say they seek a negotiated solution, but they remain at loggerheads, with negotiations stalled. Ethiopia insists the dispute must be resolved through negotiations between the two parties, with Mahamoud Dirir, the ambassador to Egypt, noting in a statement last month that "there are only two… countries in the entire world which are well-placed to mediate between Egypt and Ethiopia."
Egypt, meanwhile, is quietly lobbying the international community for support against what it says is a violation of international law, diplomatic sources confirmed to Al Jazeera.
"Egypt plans to take actions to escalate the situation against Ethiopia," said a western diplomat in Cairo, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "But the exact implications of these actions [are] still unclear."

RELATED: Egypt and Ethiopia leaders meet over Nile row

Egypt's main concern is water security, as the country faces a future of increasing scarcity. Nearly all of Egypt's water comes from the Nile, and its population of 83 million is growing at nearly two percent annually.
Already, water shortages cause problems. The most common response is the reuse of wastewater in agriculture, often untreated. The 2005 UNDP Human Development Report for Egypt stated that "poor water quality affects both health and land productivity with damage costs estimated to have reached LE 5.35 billion [$7.7m] or 1.8 percent of GDP."
The Ethiopian dam is an issue that can bear no compromises.
Badr Abdelatty, Egyptian Foreign Ministry
Doaa Ezzat Zaki al-Agha, a water management specialist conducting research in the Nile delta, said five members of her family died from liver disease, which she believes resulted from poor drinking water. "They have no other choices, only the Nile water," she said.
Mohamed Abdel Wahab, a farmer from a small village of 300 families near the delta city of Alexandria, an area that regularly experiences water shortages, believes the government should be "more strict with Egypt's sovereign right to water" – and his view reflects that of many Egyptians. Any threat to the country's water supply is treated as an existential threat. Accordingly, Egypt has long opposed upstream development projects on the Nile. In the past this prevented Ethiopia from receiving money from international organisations like the World Bank, which has a "no objection" rule for projects it funds. Now, Ethiopia is funding the $4.8bn project itself.
Tensions peaked in May 2013 when Ethiopia began diverting the Blue Nile. Former Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi told a national conference: "We will defend each drop of Nile water with our blood if necessary."
Today, statements from the Egyptian Foreign Ministry are more conciliatory, with spokesperson Badr Abdelatty saying he hoped the situation could be resolved through "cooperation". A recent statement by Abdelatty on the State Information Service website, however, adds: "The Ethiopian dam is an issue that can bear no compromises."
The last negotiations in Addis Ababa in February stalled over whether international experts should be included in a technical committee being formed to implement the recommendations of a May 2013 report on the dam. Written by an international panel of experts (IPOE), the report proposed more extensive assessment of the dam's potential transboundary environmental and social impacts. "We must have an international member on the committee and the Ethiopians refused this," said Khaled Wasif, a spokesperson for the Egyptian Ministry of Irrigation and Water Resources.

RELATED: Egypt and Ethiopia agree to bridge dam divide

As construction of the dam progresses – it is already 30 percent complete – Ethiopia has less incentive to negotiate and Egypt has less leverage. With negotiations at an impasse, Egypt is petitioning other countries for support, sources say. By referring to supposed breaches of international law, Egypt hopes to pressure donor communities who have investments in or influence on Ethiopia, according to the western diplomat in Cairo.
Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy has toured Africa and Europe in recent months and Nile water has been on the agenda. During a trip to Italy at the start of February, Fahmy asked the Italian company contracted to build the dam to halt construction. A Foreign Ministry letter to the Salini Construttori company, obtained by Al Jazeera, states: "The government of Egypt calls upon the EU Commission, and the esteemed European governments, to give due consideration to the accountability of business enterprise of European nationality for their conduct in supporting Ethiopia's projects affecting the Nile river downstream states."
It continues: "Egypt also calls upon the government of Italy, to invite Salini construttori to suspend construction works at the GERDP [Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam Project] until the recommendations of the IPOE Report are implemented."
The Egyptian Foreign Ministry, the EU delegation in Cairo and the Italian embassy in Cairo declined to comment on the note. A spokesman for the Italian embassy said: "On this aspect we don't feel like replying on their behalf [of the Egyptian foreign ministry]. If they don't want to talk about it, it is fine for us as well."
Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan should all agree on the principles which they agree on before trying to take refuge or shelter from the principles of international water law.
Muhammad Mizanur Rahaman,professor of international water law
According to the diplomat in Cairo, Egypt has also lobbied the US, China, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Japan, as well as international organisations such as the World Bank. Spokespeople for all of these governments and organisations declined to comment, with the exception of the Japanese embassy in Cairo, which denied being approached by Egypt on the issue.

RELATED: Next on Egypt's to-do: Ethiopia and the Nile

Until recently, Egypt has relied on a "historic right" and colonial-era treaties to defend its water share.
"This position is absolutely untenable," said Owen McIntyre, a professor of international water law at University College Cork, noting the colonial-era agreements "completely ignore upper riparian states".
Today, Egypt's position has evolved, with the government quoting "widely respected" principles of international law. "International watercourses are governed by a set of agreed legal rules and principles," Abdelatty said. "Among these widely respected rules and principles is that of the equitable and reasonable utilisation of the river, the ‘no harm' rule, and the prior notification rule."
However, Egypt's interpretation differs from that of its neighbour and much of the international community, McIntyre said, noting the principle is generally formulated in terms of "significant harm".
The May 2013 IPOE report concluded that despite more studies being needed, long-term effects of the dam were unlikely to harm Egypt. In the short term, however, less water will reach Egypt as the reservoir fills.
While Ethiopia says it is open to negotiating the period over which it fills the reservoir, Egypt insists it will be harmed regardless. A country's dependence on water is the primary factor by which harm is evaluated, McIntyre said, and Egypt insists it is a water-scarce country. "The problem is that when you look at Egypt's use of Nile water, it is actually rather wasteful," McIntyre said.
The harm principle is just one factor to be considered alongside the obligation on states to cooperate in the reasonable and equitable utilisation of transboundary watercourses, he added.
Egypt's history of cooperation is not strong. The Nile Basin Initiative, a partnership of Nile riparian states formed in 1999 and supported by the World Bank, aimed to create a cooperative framework agreement for the management of Nile water. But Egypt refused to sign any agreement that did not guarantee its current share of Nile water.
In addition, Egypt previously objected to the very principles it now advocates. It did not support the UN Watercourses Convention 1997, which codified the principles of transboundary water management. "Egypt cannot get help through international water law as Egypt herself did not acknowledge these principles historically," said Muhammad Mizanur Rahaman, a professor of international water law at Asia Pacific University in Bangladesh.
By acting unilaterally, "Ethiopia is now, ironically, following the same path as Egypt did before" when it constructed the Aswan High Dam in the 1960s, Rahaman noted. "Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan should all agree on the principles which they agree on before trying to take refuge or shelter from the principles of international water law."


=>aljazeera

De-Oromonizing Finfine and Beyound: TPLF’s Evil Agenda THAT MUST BE STOPPED NOW

By HGoche | April 21, 2014
Over a week ago, while skimming through current news and articles, I read an article titled “Old World Order: How geopolitics fuels endless chaos and old-school conflicts in the 21st Century” on Time Magazine of March 31, 2014 by Robert D. Kaplan., which I thought explains the behaviours past and current Abyssinian regimes land grab in Oromia and the South.
Although, Kaplan’s article much focuses on the geographical struggle between the East-West struggle for control of Ukraine, and the consequent annexation of Crimea by Russia as the mere reality of the 19th century behaviour in the 21st century. According to Kaplan, it is not the international law that defines territory but rather the bonds of blood that go with one’s own territory is central to what defines us human. In other words, the European behaviours of 19th century geographical expansion into different parts of the world for economic and geo-politics of the place is well alive and kicking in different parts of today’s world. Apart from the East-west struggle for control of Ukarine, Kaplan, also demonstrates the fracturing of Middle Eastern states into ethnic and sectarian fiefs or the Sunnis and the Shiites for control more geography and resources, the disputes over territorial claim of the East China sea among the East Asian states as more examples that geo-politics and the control for resources is not negated by technology and globalization. Kaplan, further, argues that “whereas the West has come to think about international relations in terms of laws and multinational agreements, most of the rest of the world still thinks in terms of deserts, mountain ranges, all- weather ports and tracts of land and water. The world is back to the maps of elementary school as a starting point for an understanding of history, culture, religion and ethnicity- not to mention power struggles over trade routes and natural resources”.
The expansion of the Abyssinian Empire since the late 19th century by Menilik with the help of the Europeans and the resulting conquest of the states south of the empire, namely the Oromos, the Sidamas, and the Walaitas, have resulted in massive killings and displacement of the indigenous population and confiscating of their land and appropriating to the Abyssinian army and the new settlers from the North. Furthermore, garrison towns were established in the new colonies, where the invading Abyssinian army enforces the new laws of evicting the indigenous population from their ancestral land or in the case of many places, the new Abyssinian settlers were given the land with the whole population living on it, by making them the properties of the settlers. These policies of dispossessing the indigenous population of their land at will continued under successive Abyssinian regimes by disguising their crime using names such as cooperative farms, state farm, etc. Dispossessing societies of their own ancestral land is not only depriving them of their lively-hood and means of survivals but also depriving them of their culture, history, norms and way of life.
Although, this geographical genocide in the south by successive Abyssinian regimes continued unabated, it reached its climax under the current minority TPLF junta. Since 1991, the TPLF junta has been busy selling Oromia’s land to the highest bidder to his Tigrian cronies and his Arab backers in the name of development. TPLF is not only selling Oromia’s land at the highest speed but also destroying Oromia’s forests deliberately starting fires, and hence destroying the indigenous wildlife, flora and fauna that the Oromos cared for centuries for generations to come.
The recent fake debate by the TPLFities to incorporate towns and villages of Oromia under the Finfine jurisdiction in the name of development is the continuation of a century old Abyssinian expansion to stamp out Oromos footprint from their ancestral land.
One should ask why only towns and cities in Oromia are designated special administrative status under the TPLF so- called Federal system?
Since 1991, the TPLF juntas named two economically significant cities, Finfine and Dire-Dawa as special zones, just merely for the purpose of denying Oromos to have economic, social and political benefits that these two cities generate, rather the social, economic and political benefits generated from these cities goes to fatten the coffers of TPLF cronies and the companies they control.
The lousy argument used by TPLF to grant special status to Finfine and Dire- Dawa, and, thereby under TPLF control was that the two cities are multi-ethnic and cities with heavy industries. On the other hand, the 1994 TPLF constitution and the Oromia State constitution stipulate that the Oromia State shall receive “special” benefits from the two cities, which will be decided by the law. Both the law that define the special benefits the Oromia State should receive from both cities as well were not materialized for over 20 years. This testifies the official claim that OPDO is full of all yes men like trained dogs, and their only mission and purpose is to carry-out tasks given to them by their TPLF masters. It also demonstrates, it is the TPLF that controls every single affair of the Oromia State.
According to secret internal sources, after the next election, the following cities are on TPLF’s hit lists to bring them under TPLF control in the name of development and the industries in these cities. These cities are: Awasa, Jima, Shashemene, Adama cities are on the hit lists of TPLF. The question that needs to be asked is why assigning special status to only cities and towns in Oromia and the South? Why not cities such as Bahir Dar, Kombolcha, Mekele not under Federal control? Because these cities are also have many industries as those cities in Oromia and the South.
So, why is TPLF is pushing hard to expand Finfine to other towns and villages in Oromia under the guise of development?
  1. The first and most strategic objective of expanding Finfine is to split Oromia into two separate geographies, that is Eastern Oromia and Western Oromia, which will be much easier to govern.
  2. To de-Oromonize Finfine by settling more Abyssinians
  3. To appeal to the Amhara groups (inside and outside) that TPLF has not abandoned their project of assimilating the South under the Abyssinian empire.
  4. There is more resources that can be sold to TPLF cronies and the so-called investors.
The Oromo struggle for the de-colonization of Oromia has begun in earnest since 1970’s. Many important victories are scored so far by the huge sacrifices of Oromos from all walks of life. Using the current stagnation of the Oromo struggle and with the help of the enemy within, the TPLF is waging human and environmental genocide in Oromia since 1991. It is the duties and responsibilities of each Oromo to urgently rise up together to stop and expel the TPLF terrorist regime from Oromia’s soil once and for all before TPLF destroys what is left of our Country’s fabric.
HGoche
Related:

Puzzle of 65 Ethiopians arrested in Ruiru house

NABBED: Some of the 65 Ethiopians arrested in Ruiru.
NABBED: Some of the 65 Ethiopians arrested in Ruiru.
The police are investigating how 65 illegal Ethiopian immigrants sneaked into Ruiru and booked into a guesthouse without being detected at a time security organs are cracking down on illegal immigrants and suspected terrorists.
The large party of men arrived on Tuesday night and were all ushered into a house by a local accomplice. Ruiru police chief Issac Thuranira who led an operation to arrest the foreigners said yesterday the illegal immigrants had been in Kenya for three days.
Sources said the focus of the probe will be to establish how the large number of people made their way deep into Kenya without being stopped at the road blocks between Ruiru and the Kenya-Ethiopia border.
An Ethiopian refugee in Kenya identified Yusuf Wadeh Badole has been identified by the police as the man who made plans for the big group. Badole was granted asylum by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) on January 30.
He was among the people arrested yesterday by police from the Ruiru Police Station and taken to the Safaricom Kasarani Stadium for screening. Police also arrested Jacob Muturi, the caretaker of the guest house where the aliens were living.
Muturi told the police he did not know when the group came into the building as he lives away from the guest house. He told the police that the landlord whom he identified as Teresia Wanjiru had rented the house to a tenant whom left last week.
He claimed that he came into the guest house when the police arrived and that he wanted to lock the house as instructed by his boss. Two men who were driving in a Toyota Probox which had brought food to the group were also arrested and the vehicle towed to Kasarani police station.
Badole was driving the vehicle and was in the company of a second man. A police source said they will focus on the police and immigration officers manning the Kenya-Ethiopia border.
Preliminary investigations revealed that the suspects were being trafficked to South Africa after which they would find their way to Europe. Interior and coordination Cabinet Secretary Joseh Ole Lenku yesterday made an impromptu visit to the Kasarani stadium and held discussions with top police commanders in charge of the screening centre.
A police crackdown of illegal immigrants, especially Somalis, in the past two weeks has sparked off a tide of political and religious acrimony. Somali politicians and Muslim clerics have blamed the police for racial profiling, racial discrimination and human rights abuse.
But the police have maintained they are keen to rid the country of foreigners who might be linked to terror attacks in Mombasa and Nairobi. Thousands of Somalis were arrested and detained at the Safaricom Kasarani Stadium as their travel papers are verified by the police and immigration.
On Thursday former Speaker Farah was summoned by the police after he claimed in a TV talk show that the government could be fueling terror attacks to carry favour with the Western powers.


=>thestar

Eebba TV Bakkalchaa Irratti Isin Affeeruu Ilaala

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Jaalatamtoota lammii Oromoo hundaaf
Bakka jirtanitti
Dhimmi: Eebba TV Bakkalchaa irratti isin affeeruu ilaala
Duraan dursinee nagaan keenya kan Oromummaa bakka jirtanitti isin haa dhaqabu. TVn BakkalchaaMidiyaa ilaalcha siyaasaa, amantaa, laga, gosaa fi naannoo kamiiyyuu irraa walaba ta’ee lammii Oromoo hundaa walqixa tajaajiluuf kan hundaa’ee Midiyaa sub-qunnamtii Oromooti. TVn Bakkalchaa kan Oromoo hundaati. TVn Bakkalchaa haqa dhugaa irratti hundaa’ee Oromoo hunda walqixa tajaajiluuf Miidiyaa dhabbatee dha. TVn Bakkalchaa ija Oromooti. TVn Bakkalchaa sagalee Oromooti, TVn Bakkalaa gurraa fi dhageettii Oromooti. TVn Bakkalaa tokkummaan Oromoo akka daraan jabaatuuf halkanii fi guyyaa cimee hojjchuuf karoora guddaa qaba. TVn Bakkalchaa tumsa lammii isaa barbaada. Waan keesan irratti hirmaadhaa isniin jedha. TVn Bakkalchaa ilam keessan kunuunsaa, guddisaa, akkasumas itti fayyadamaa.
Yeroo ammaa TV Bakkalchaa qophii isaa hunda xumuratee tajaajila torbaan guutuu kan saa’aa 24f Oromoota biyya keessaa fi biyya ambaa jiraatniif sagantaalee tajaajila adda addaa kennuuf qophii isaa xumuratee jira. TV Bakkalchaa gaafa Ebla guyyaa 30 bara 2014 Biyya Noorwee Magalaa Moss jedhamtu keessati sagantaa isaa eebbaan eegala.
Kanaafuu jalatamtootaa fi kabajamoon Ummanni Oromoo hundinuu gaafa guyyaa eebba TVn Bakkalchaa irratti akka nuuf argamtan kabaja guddaan isin affeerra. Warri qaamaan nu bira dhufuu hin dandeenye akka yaadaan nu bira dhaabbattan irra deebinee isin gaafanna.
Warri qaamaan nu bira dhufuu barbaaddan karaa tora marsalee teessoo keenyaatiin nu qunnamuu dandeettan. Yaadaa fi qeeqa qabadnis akka nuu gumachitan irra deebinee kabajaan iisin gaafanna. Teessoon keenya www.bakkalchatv.com, Email: bottaa@bakkalchatv.com, grete@bakkalchatv.com, wadaay@bakkalchatv.com, +47 96671888/+4799874452/+4790609725
TVn Bakkalchaa sagalee Ummata Oromooti.
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