by Alemayehu G. Mariam
Late last month, Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Defense Minister Prince Khalid Bin Sultan fired a shot across the bow from the
Arab Water Council in Cairo to let the regime in Ethiopia know that his
country takes a dim view of the “Grand Renaissance Dam” under
“construction” on the Blue Nile (Abbay) a few miles from Sudan’s eastern
border. According to Prince Khalid,
“The [Grand] Renaissance dam has its capacity of flood waters reaching
more than 70 billion cubic meters of water… [I]f it collapsed Khartoum
will be drowned completely and the impact will even reach the Aswan
Dam…” The Prince believes the Dam is being built close to the “Sudanese
border for political plotting rather than for economic gain and
constitutes a threat to Egyptian and Sudanese national security…” The
Prince raised the stakes by accusing the regime in Ethiopia of being
hell-bent on harming Arab peoples. “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…”
A spokesman for the regime in power in Ethiopia sought to minimize the importance of the Prince’s statement by
suggesting that the Saudi Ambassador in Addis Ababa had disavowed the
Prince’s statement as official policy or a position endorsed by the
Saudi government. The alleged disavowal of the statement of a member of
the Saudi royal family and top defense official seems curiously
disingenuous after the fact. But that is understandable since “an
ambassador is an honest man sent to lie abroad for the good of his
country.” The regime spokesman also insinuated in fuzzy diplomatese that
such inflammatory statements could result in war between Arab countries
and African countries in the Nile basin.
The real possibility of a
water war between countries of the upper Nile basin, and in particular
Ethiopia, and Egypt and Sudan over the so-called Grand Renaissance Dam
is the (white) elephant in the room that no one wants to talk about
openly and earnestly at this stage. But in November 2010, the late
dictator Meles Zenawi in an interview with Reuters seemed to defiantly relish the possibility of war with Egypt. With
taunting, dismissive and contemptuous arrogance, Meles not only
insulted the Egyptian people as hopelessly backward but bragged that he
will swiftly vanquish any invading Egyptian army. “I am not worried that
the Egyptians will suddenly invade Ethiopia. Nobody who has tried that
has lived to tell the story. I don’t think the Egyptians will be any
different and I think they know that…The Egyptians have yet to make up
their minds as to whether they want to live in the 21st or the 19th
century.” Meles also accused Egypt of trying to destabilize Ethiopia by
supporting unnamed rebel groups which he promised to crush. Meles served
the Egyptians an ultimatum to engage in “civil dialogue”: “If we
address the issues around which the rebel groups are mobilized then we
can neutralize them and therefore make it impossible for the Egyptians
to fish in troubled waters because there won’t be any… Hopefully that
should convince the Egyptians that, as direct conflict will not work,
and as the indirect approach is not as effective as it used to be, the
only sane option will be civil dialogue.”
Egyptian
Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit denied Meles’ allegations and
expressed amusement and amazement over Meles’ braggadocio. “I’m
amazed … by the language that was used. We are not seeking war and there
will not be war… The charges that Egypt… is exploiting rebel groups
against the ruling regime in Ethiopia are completely devoid of truth.”
Gheit may have been diplomatically deescalating the war of words, but
his statement belies statements by a long line of top Egyptian leaders
over the decades. President Anwar Sadat in 1978 declared, “We depend
upon the Nile100 per cent in our life, so if anyone, at any moment, thinks of depriving us of our life we shall never hesitate to go to war.”
Boutros Boutros Gahali, when he was the Egyptian Foreign State Minister
(later U.N. Secretary General), confirmed the same sentiment when he
asserted “the next war in our region will be over the water of the Nile,
not politics.”
“If it comes to a crisis, we will send a jet to bomb the dam and come back in one day, simple as that.”
What
will Egypt will do if Meles’ “Grand Renaissance Dam” is in fact built?
“Simple.” They will use dam busters to smash and trash it.
An email from the American private security organization Stratfor released by Wikileaks citing its source as “high-level Egyptian security/intel in regular direct contact with Mubarak and Suleiman”,
“If it comes to a crisis, we will send a jet to bomb the dam and come
back in one day, simple as that. Or we can send our special forces in to
block/sabotage the dam. But we aren’t going for the military option
now. This is just contingency planning. Look back to an operation Egypt
did in the mid-late 1970s, I think 1976, when Ethiopia was trying to
build a large dam. We blew up the equipment while it was traveling by sea to Ethiopia. A useful case study…”
The
same source further indicated that Egypt is “discussing military
cooperation with Sudan” and has “a strategic pact with the Sudanese
since in any crisis over the Nile, Sudan gets hit first then us.” That military cooperation includes stationing Egyptian “commandos in
the Sudan for ‘worst case’ scenario on the Nile issue. Sudanese
president Umar al-Bashir has agreed to allow the Egyptians to build a
small airbase in Kusti to accommodate Egyptian commandos who might be
sent to Ethiopia to destroy water facilities on the Blue Nile…The military option is not one that the Egyptians favor. It will be their option if everything else fails.”
So far Egypt has successfully lobbied the multilateral development and
other investment banks and donors to deny or cut funding for the dam and
to apply political and diplomatic pressure on Ethiopia and the other
upstream Nile countries. The World Bank has publicly stated it will not
to fund any new projects on the Nile without Egypt’s approval.
The Grand Renaissance Dam or the grand dam (de)illusion?
All
African dictators like to build big projects because it is part of the
kleptocratic African “Big Man” syndrome. By undertaking “white elephant”
projects (wasteful vanity projects), African dictators seek to attain
greatness and amass great fortunes in life and immortality in death.
Kwame Nkrumah built the Akosombo Dam on the Volta River, at the time
dubbed the “largest single investment in the economic development plans
of Ghana”. Mobutu sought to outdo Nkrumah by building the largest dam in
Africa on the Inga Dams in western Democratic Republic of the Congo
(Zaire) on the largest waterfalls in the world (Inga Falls). In the
Ivory Coast, Félix Houphouët-Boigny built the largest church in the
world, The Basilica of Our Lady of Peace of Yamoussoukro, at a cost of
USD$300 million. It stands empty today. Self-appointed Emperor
Jean-Bedel Bokassa of the Central African Republic built a 500-room
Hotel Intercontinental at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars
while millions of his people starved. Moamar Gadhafi launched the Great
Man-Made River in Libya, dubbed the world’s largest irrigation project,
and proclaimed it the “Eighth Wonder of the World.” Gamal Abdel Nasser
built the Aswan High Dam which could be affected significantly if
upstream Nile countries build new dams. Ugandan dictator Yuweri Museveni
built the Bujagali dam which was completed in 2012. The backflow from
that dam has submerged a huge area of cultivable and settled land
forcing migration and resettlement of large numbers of people.
Meles
Zenawi hoped to build the “Grand Renaissance Dam” as the mother of all
dams on the African continent to outdo Nkrumah, Mobutu and Gadhafi. Like
all of the African white elephants, this Dam is a vanity make-believe
project partly intended to glorify Meles and magnify his international
prestige while diverting attention from the endemic corruption that has consumed his regime as recently documented in a 448-page World Bank report.
Meles sought to cover his bloody hands and clothe his naked
dictatorships with megaprojects and veneers of progress and development.
The “Grand Renaissance Dam” is the temporary name for the “Grand Meles
Memorial Dam”. Meles wanted to be immortalized in that largest cement
monument in the history of the African continent. To be sure, he had a
“dry run” on immortality when he commissioned the construction of
Gilgel Gibe III Dam on the Omo River in southern Ethiopia which has
been dubbed the “largest hydroelectric plant in Africa with a power
output of about 1870 Megawatt.”
The Dam and the damned
There
is little doubt that IF the “Grand Renaissance Dam” is completed, it
will have a significant long term impact on water supply and
availability to the Sudan and Egypt. The general view among the experts
is that if the dam is constructed as specified by the regime in Ethiopia, it could result in significant reduction in cultivable agricultural lands and water shortages throughout Egypt. According to Mohamed Nasr El Din Allam, the former Egyptian minster of water and irrigation, if the dam is built “Millions of people would go hungry. There would be water shortages everywhere. It’s huge.”
The
regime in Ethiopia claims the depth of the Dam will be 150 meters and
the water reservoir behind the Dam could be used to irrigate more than
500,000 hectares of new agricultural lands. Experts suggest that the
water reservoir behind the dam could hold as much as 62bn cubic meters
of water; and depending upon seasonal rainfall and the rate at which the
reservoir is filled, there could be significant reductions in the flow
of water to Egypt and Sudan. The environmental impact of the Dam in
Ethiopia will be catastrophic. Experts believe such a dam if built will
“flood 1,680 square kilometers of forest in northwest Ethiopia, near
the Sudan border, and create a reservoir that is nearly twice as large
as Lake Tana, Ethiopia’s largest natural lake….” The so-called
tripartite committee of international experts is expected to issue its
report on the potential environmental impacts of the Dam in May 2013.
The legal dimensions of the Nile water dispute
The
are many knotty legal issues surrounding the treaties and agreements
concluded between Britain as a colonial power and the countries in the
Nile basin (Burundi, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania,
Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Eritrea, the Sudan, and Egypt) on the use of
Nile water. Beginning in 1891, Britain concluded at least seven
agreements on the use and control of the Nile. In the major treaties,
the British included language which effectively prevented Ethiopia and
other upstream countries from “construct[ing] any irrigation or other
works which might sensibly modify its flow into the Nile” or its
“tributaries.” For instance, the May 15, 1902 Treaty regarding the Frontiers between the Anglo- Egyptian Sudan, Ethiopia and British Eritrea,
restrained “His Majesty the Emperor Menelik II, King of kings of
Ethiopia” from “construct[ing] or allow[ing] to be constructed, any
works across the Blue Nile, Lake Tsana or the Sobat,… except in
agreement with his Britannic Majesty’s Government and the Government of
the Sudan”.
The current legal and political controversy over the
Nile water revolves around the 1929 Nile Waters Agreement (which
guarantees disproportionately high volumes of Nile water (85 percent) to
Egypt and gave Egypt the right to monitor the Nile flow in the upstream
countries and veto powers on all Nile projects upstream) and the 1959 agreement between Britain and Egypt in regards to the use of waters of the River Nile for irrigation purposes
which recognized “Egypt’s natural and historic rights in the waters of
the Nile and its requirements of agricultural extension…”
A number
of the upper-riparian states including Ethiopia, Tanzania and Burundi
have rejected the validity of the 1929 Treaty and believe that they have
the right to do whatever they choose with the water that flows through
their boundaries (“Harmon Doctrine”).
In 1964, the Government of Tanganyika openly disavowed the 1929
agreement (“Nyerere Doctrine” which asserts that a newly independent
state has the right to “opt in” or selectively succeed to colonial
treaties): “The Government of Tanganyika has come to the conclusion
that the provisions of the 1929 Agreement purporting to apply to the
countries ‘under British Administration’ are not binding on Tanganyika.”
On similar grounds, Uganda and Kenya subsequently rejected that
agreement. Even Sudan has challenged the allocation ratio of the water
it got under that agreement.
Ethiopia’s legal position on the various colonial treaties is explored in full in Gebre Tasadik Degefu’s authoritative work, The Nile: Historical, Legal and Developmental Perspectives
(2003). Gebre Tasadik challenges the validity of the treaties on the
grounds that “while Ethiopia’s natural rights in a certain share of the
waters in its own territory are undeniable…, no treaty has ever
mentioned them. This fact would be sufficient for invalidating the
binding force of those agreements, which have no counterpart in favor of
Ethiopia.” He also points out significant technical issues in the
treaties. He suggests that the “English version of the 1902 agreement
obliged Ethiopia to seek prior accord with the united kingdom before
initiating any works that might affect the discharge of the Blue Nile…
The Amharic version does not oblige Ethiopia to request permission from
the British Government…”
Others have argued that Ethiopia is not
bound by the 1902 treaty with Britain because the “treaty never came
into force as Britain did not ratify it and the Ethiopian government had
rejected it in the 1950s”. Even if that treaty were valid, Britain is
said to have violated its terms by “supporting and recognizing the
Italian invasion of Ethiopia in violation of Article 60 of the 1902
agreement”. Technical interpretation of the relevant clauses of the 1902
treaty are also said to favor Ethiopia since that treaty “does not
prohibit use of the Nile” but obliges Ethiopia “not to arrest of the
Nile, which is interpreted to mean total blockage.”
The 1959 Nile Waters Agreement between Egypt and Sudan sought
to give the two countries full control and utilization of Nile water by
modifying certain aspects of the 1929 agreement. But that agreement
completely ignored the interests of any of the upstream countries,
particularly Ethiopia.
Egypt has refused to renegotiate the
84-year-old treaty and insist on the perpetual binding authority of the
colonial era treaties as legal formalizations of Egypt’s historical and
natural rights over the Nile water. They also insist that the
international law of state succession makes the treaties made by
colonial Britain binding on successor post-independence African states.
The
general consensus among informed commentators is that the Nile treaties
are not binding in perpetuity. They point to the inequitable elements
of the various agreements on upper riparian states and the radical
change in the scope of obligations under the agreements over the past
eight decades to challenge the validity of the colonial era treaties.
The
paramount question is not whether the Nile water dispute can be
resolved in an international court of law or other tribunal but what
political accommodations can be made by the basin states to equitably
benefit their nations and strengthen their bonds of friendship.
Equitable sharing of Nile water is necessary not only for regional
stability and amity but also to meet the growing energy and food
production needs of the populations of all Nile basin countries in the
coming decades. There is no shortage of predictions of doom and gloom
over the looming water scarcity worldwide. Over a decade ago, United
Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan warned, “Fierce competition for
fresh water may well become a source of conflict and wars in the
future.” Insisting on the eternal validity and binding nature of the
Nile water treaties is untenable and unreasonable.
The Nile Basin
Initiative was established in 1999 to develop a scheme for the equitable
distribution of water among the Nile basin countries. Ethiopia, Uganda,
Tanzania, Rwanda and Kenya have signed the Agreement on the Nile River Basin Cooperative Framework (Entebbe Agreement).
This agreement allows construction of projects that do not
“significantly” affect the Nile water flow. Egypt has rejected the
Agreement because it necessitates renegotiation of its share of the Nile
water and surrender of its veto power guaranteed under the old
agreements.
Water, water everywhere… and Meles’ “damplomacy” of brinksmanship
Whether
there will be an actual “Grand Renaissance Dam” is the $5bn dollar
question of the century. Because Egypt has been successful in pressuring
multilateral development and investment banks not to fund the project,
the regime in Ethiopia has defiantly forged ahead to fund the project
itself. But is self-funding of the mother of all African dams a
realistic possibility?
The regime has kept much of the details of
the Dam behind smoke and mirrors. The regime claims that the dam is 14
percent complete (whatever that means) and will reach 26 percent
completion by the end of 2013. When it comes online in 2015 as
scheduled, the regime claims the dam will have the power generating
capacity of nearly 6,000MW, much of it to be exported to the Sudan,
Egypt and the Arabian peninsula.
But the whole “Grand Renaissance Dam” project is being staged in the theatre of the absurd. Is
it possible to raise USD$5bn by 2015 from the people of the second
poorest country in the world, the vast majority of whom live on less
than USD$1? The dam is said to cost as much as the country’s total
annual budget of USD$5bn. Is the largest recipient of international aid
in Africa capable of raising multiple billions of dollars from its
citizens for the Dam? Can a country which “lost US$11.7 billion to illicit financial outflows between 2000 and 2009” be able to undertake construction of a USD$5bn dam (unadjusted for cost overruns) on its own? According to the World Bank, Ethiopia’s
“power sector alone would require $3.3 billion per year to develop” in
the next decade. Can the regime in Ethiopia be able to build the
largest dam in Africa and other energy projects resorting to such “desperate measures” as “musical concerts, a lottery and an SMS campaign to raise funds”? Can a country which the IMF describes as having “foreign reserves [that] have declined to under two months of import coverage” as of June 2012
really be able to build the largest dam in African history? Can a
country whose external debt in 2012 exceeded USD$12bn be able to build a
$5bn dollar project?
The regime has forged ahead to build the
“Grand Renaissance Dam” by “selling bonds” domestically and in the
Ethiopian Diaspora. The regime claims to have collected USD$500 million
from bond sales and “contributions” of ordinary citizens. Business and institutions have been forced to buy bonds.
The regime’s Diaspora bond sales effort has been a total failure. Most
Ethiopians in the Diaspora have been unwilling to bet on imaginary and
speculative future earnings from operations of the dam because of the
regime’s morbid secrecy and lack of transparency. They have little
confidence in the regime’s capacity to guarantee their bond investments.
For instance, current underpricing in power tariffs which have ranged
between “$0.04-0.08 per kilowatt-hour are low by regional standards and
recover only 46 percent of the costs of the utility.” That does not bode
well for long term bond holders.
The regime in Ethiopia also has
serious problems of cost overruns and poor project management in dam
construction. For instance, the Tekeze
hydroelectric dam on the Tekeze River, a Nile tributary, in northern
Ethiopia was initially estimated to cost USD$224 million, but when
it was completed seven years later in 2008, its cost skyrocketed to
USD$360 million. How much the “Grand Renaissance Dam” will eventually
cost, if built, is anybody’s guess. Regime ineptitude and mismanagement of Gilgel Gibe II on the Omo River in February 2010 resulted in a “tunnel collapse [which] closed the largest hydropower plant operating in Ethiopia, only 10 days after its inauguration.”
To
add insult to injury, the Meles regime has the gall to say that it
intends to sell the power from the “Grand Renaissance Dam” to the Sudan,
Egypt and the Arabian peninsula once construction is complete. That is
not only nonsensical but downright insane! Why would Egypt or the Sudan
buy power from a dam that damns them by effectively reducing their water
supply for agriculture and their own production of power?
Meles
and his disciples have always known that they do not have the financial
capacity to complete the Dam. They also know that actually completing
the constructing the dam will be dangerous for their own survival as a
regime should regional war break out. But Meles has always been a
peerless grandmaster of intrigue, machination, duplicity, one-upmanship
and diplomatic gamesmanship. With this Dam, he was merely pushing the
envelope to the outer limits. His real aim was not the construction of
dam but to use the specter of the construction of a gargantuan dam on
the Nile to fabricate fear of an imminent regional water war. His price
for continued regional stability, avoidance of conflict and maintenance
of the status quo would be billions in loans, aid and other concessions
from the international community and downstream countries.
Meles’
diplomatic strategy shrouded a clever deterrent military strategy: If
Egypt goes for broke and attacks the “Grand Renaissance Dam”, Ethiopia
could retaliate by attacking the Aswan dam. Meles likely believed the
threat of mutual assured destruction will prevent an actual war while
maintaining extremely high levels of regional tensions. By playing a
game of chicken with Egypt and the Sudan, Meles hoped to strong-arm
donor and development banks and wealthy countries in the region into
giving him financial, political and diplomatic support. There is no
question Meles would have driven on a collision course with Egypt only
to swerve at the last second to avoid a fatal crash had he been in power
today. It is unlikely that Meles’ disciples have the intellectual
candlepower (“megawattage”) or the sheer cunning and artfulness of their
master to play a game of chicken with Egypt to skillfully extract
concessions.
For love of white elephants and war of the damned
Water
is a source of life. War is a source of death. The water of the Nile
has given life to Ethiopians, Egyptians and the people of the Nile basin
countries since time immemorial. If Meles prepared for war by building
his dam, his disciples shall surely inherit war. But Meles should have
reflected on the words of Ethiopia’s poet laureate Tsegaye Gebremedhin before
embarking on his “Grand Renaissance Dam” project: “O Nile, you are the
music that restores the rhythm of existence…/ You are the irrigator that
cultivate peace…/ …From my Ethiopia sacred mountains of the sun…”
Meles’
legacy could indeed be a water war of death and destruction on the
Nile, but he will never have a cement monument built on the Nile to
celebrate his life. Meles’ disciples would be wise to remember an old
prophesy as they march headlong to build their doomsday dam on the Nile:
“God gave Noah the Rainbow Sign: No more water. The fire next time!”
Professor
Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State
University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense lawyer.
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