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Ethiopia: the enduring food crisis and legal politics of the Nile River

08/10/08

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Ethiopia: the enduring food crisis and legal politics of the Nile River

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Ethiopia: the enduring food crisis and legal politics of the Nile River

(By Tadesse Kassa, Doctoral Research Fellow, University of Oslo)

The enduring state of deprivation and vulnerability in which the state of Ethiopia placed itself has for decades been the subject of intense media exposure and unenthusiastic reflection. In contrast to civilizations that prospered in a midst of turbulence, for over a century, Ethiopia performed shoddily in nearly all key indexes impinging on the development of the single most vital sector that profoundly affected the lives of millions of its population: agriculture. Its farming remained prehistoric, crops failed regularly, and draught and famine have simply recurred. The portrayal of its image can barely be any worse that today, in all fitting discourses, famine literatures have securely positioned Ethiopia along with the great famines of the mid-20th Century in China, India, Bangladesh, the Biafra province of Nigeria and later, in the Sudan.

The scale and impact of the privation had varied. Since the incidence of the worst episode-the Great Ethiopian Famine of 1888-1892, the prevalence of hunger, typically absorbed in pockets of northern Ethiopia, has gradually but unabatedly, broadened its horizons. If sporadically, it has claimed the lives of its citizenry, destabilised the demographic composition of its communities, and even more, has gravely challenged the social and economic fabric of its existence.

And decades of an interminable state of food insecurity has exposed the nation to appeal for a progressively more benevolent handout of the international community. As with the preceding regimes, the ethical dilemma and political implications of the misfortune have been dreadfully colossal that only recently, the Federal Government had to engage in contemptible media crusade that merely endeavoured to trim down the count of ‘millions’ affected by the food shortages.

A blend of causes associated with human-ecological imbalance, land degradation and misguided government policies account for the predicament. The subsistence nature of agriculture exclusively relying on the munificence of an erratic rainfall pattern has furthermore exacerbated the trouble.

The distasteful irony of the experience is however that the national challenge has routinely ‘befallen unto the land of antique civilization’ endowed with a unique set of hydrologic configuration and an incredible mass of water resources relative to its human demand. The Blue Nile River basin alone, the unfailing spectacle that sprang from the outlying fountainhead of the Gish Abay stream in Sacala district of Gojjam, and yielded precious waters since the dawn of human history, discharges as huge a volume as 49.5 BCM of annual average at the Rosaries, just across the Ethio-Sudanese border, and swanks more than 2 million hectares of potentially irrigable land. Ethiopian mean contribution to the main Nile’s surge through the three head streams, the Sobat, the Abay, and the Atbara-Tekeze has been computed at 68.7 BCM of waters at Aswan, i.e. 82 percent of the entire Nile flow.

In spite of nature’s rare bequest and the vast potentials of the river in reinvigorating growth, sadly, the complexion of Ethiopia’s irrigational infrastructure and farming practices lagged far behind developments in Egypt and Sudan. While the annual inundations of ‘our river’ presented the foundation of one of the most stable and structured eco-political society of human history in the lower most reaches and unceasingly sustained the world’s single-largest agricultural scheme at the Gezira, the state of Ethiopia basically remained a bystander, too feeble to nourish its own people.

Officially and in public opinion, the lasting misfortune has partly been appreciated as a direct corollary of a legal snag instituted by British colonial administration, political vacillation, inert visionary acumen and sheer failure of the successive Ethiopian governments to capitalize on packed prospects of its wealth, including the Blue Nile River. Sequences of policies and strategies designed at different epochs with a view to deflecting hunger and guaranteeing food security at household levels have in point of fact failed.

No doubt, the thwarting state of affairs and the ensuing moral annihilation has confronted the good conscience of its citizenry. Whereas it is for the learned government functionaries to design a national scheme which tenders an immediate and realistic resolution, at least, in so far as part of the key way-out proffered by the Nile River resource and prospective chances of its utilization is concerned, nothing short of an aggressive, astutely considered policy and political subtlety can secure Ethiopia’s emancipation.

Developing full potentials of the Blue Nile has never been an easy commission for any of the regimes in Ethiopia. The fragile composition of the Nile basin establishment has continued to impose legal, political and financial constraints, and to impede exploitation of the Nile resources not only in Ethiopia, but also in the East and Central African riparian states. Evidently, the precedent established by British era imperial water diplomacy had inflicted irreparable damage.

Throughout its colonial tenure as overseer of Egyptian and Sudanese concerns, London had assiduously worked on and dismissively deduced from the Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty of May 1902 signed with Emperor Menelik II that Ethiopia, ‘barely endowed with any irrigational interests to defend’, was obliged to completely refrain from laying any water control work on or across the Blue Nile and its tributaries, the scale of any such construction notwithstanding. The manipulative legal scheme was part of a broader imperial design that projected to promote its geo-political position in the Suez Canal, and in chorus, meet the craves of its Lancashire textile industries for stable cotton supplies. The dominant thinking at the Foreign Office had then reasoned that the economic prospects of the colonies of Egypt and Sudan as well as the competitive advantages of the British cotton industry, then a dominant pillar of its capitalist enterprise, could not be realized without a treaty stipulation that espouses an exclusive downstream user rights.

Predictably, of course, the independence of Egypt and Sudan came about with an even more reinvigorated monopolistic perception that has to date continued to put the two states at odds with Ethiopia and the rest of the riparian states. Irrigational expansions, colossal land reclamations and industrial developments consuming sizable proportions of Nile waters have been resurrected against rising discontent and confront over rights of water use.

Likewise, nearly all development projections along the Blue Nile River in Ethiopia have routinely instigated a bubbling row in downstream diplomatic front, and occupied a foreward position in regional hydropolitics.

Quite obviously, Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt have historically harboured a perturbed relations. Since the earliest years of Emperor Haileselassie, Ethiopia has in fact espoused an external relations ‘policy’ that did disservice to long standing hydraulic interests of the downstream states.

All the same, camouflaged by political niceties that endeavoured to play down the presence of deep-seated incongruence between the underlying values that steer national policies, the crest of the political leaderships in Egypt and Sudan has untiringly worked on and effectively relegated Ethiopia’s positions.

Naturally, this lamentable proprietory perception deeply engrained in the psyche of downstream political establishment can not be expected to falter with out effort and sombre provocation. And the million dollar question has been how precisely Ethiopia shall pursue prospective juridical dealings in the basin.

A new regional arrangement may soon be in place impacting on the customary patterns of use of the Nile river resources. For what it is worth, the pleasant resilience unveiled in contemporary basin-wide diplomacy working on institutional and legal framework, and accompanied by novel thinking over issues of use and allocation of the river’s resource, has constituted a hitherto unparalleled forum where time-honoured position of the Ethiopian state can potentially be staked eloquently.

Egypt and Sudan have tended to get to terms with new realities of the global political order. The increasingly international orientation of their water policies, mostly dictated by adoption of a sensible approach that only closer economic and political association would ultimately guarantee their stable water use patterns, and to a measure, by progressive development of the rules and principles governing transboundary rivers, has generally drawn-in a pale optimism over some sort of regional water utilization accord.

With stakes so high and views so divergent, the Nile basin states have vigorously struggled to draw up a charter composing the rights and obligations of the riparian states and regulating collective uses of the resource. Details of this clandestine diplomatic undertaking have largely been kept confidential. A recent Ministerial Conference of the Nile basin countries, only one of such numerous meetings held in the past decade, concluded a landmark gathering in the D.R. Congo adopting a legal framework constituted in 39 articles, and deferring one provision over which the water ministers failed to find a middle ground. In a four months period, the heads of states of the riparian countries are expected to proffer the ultimate verdict on the future of the majestic river.

After one full century of rough treatment, the regional diplomatic discourse appeared to present Ethiopia with an inimitable opportunity of dealing with the legal and political predicaments involving the Nile River, and bid farewell to old accounts of disagreement and mistrust. If judiciously exploited, the occasion can potentially herald novel perspectives where the resource is no longer viewed as causing stacks of nuisance to the nation’s security, stability and international association.

For millions of Ethiopians, though, a theme of great speculation remains: if the country’s sovereign interest has been constructively represented in the ongoing negotiations and where it does, how.

The Nile River resource is as such too scarce to meet the stoutly competing claims of all the riparian states. It is only natural to assume that the regional initiative has gone through complex and painful political processes thus far.

Yet, when it comes to the composition of the legal framework due to be endorsed in four months time by heads of states, it has to be duly spotlighted that Ethiopia’s long term strategic gains and immediate state of agricultural despair would barely call for vaguely constructed political compromises attended by hyperbolical doctrines and pledges. Nothing short of a concrete legal prescription and a modus operandi that indisputably settles or otherwise recognizes Ethiopia’s fair share of the Nile inundations can recompense the damage and utter deprivation it has for long sustained.

The political leadership’s involvement shall seriously be tapered along this course. In particular, in its final dealings with Egypt, Great Britain’s undeviating progeny in convoluted water diplomacy skills, the Federal Government has two or so lessons to draw on.

First, in the interest of transparency, accountability and legitimacy, the Government should endeavour to guarantee that no single provision of the framework agreement will be endorsed before it is subjected to adequate public and professional scrutiny. It only suffices to remind that on two occasions when this requirement had been flagrantly circumvented and Ethiopia was rushed in to tying an accord on the Nile, it had only paid so dearly and found itself in diluted legal and political position.

In the immediate aftermath of conclusion of the Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty of May 1902, a defectively composed Article III where in Emperor Menelik II purportedly undertook to ‘refrain from constructing any hydraulic works which shall block the flow of the river’ had provided the UK, then a colonial power over Sudan and Egypt, more than an opening for making out a highly contentious case. In deed, in the ensuing decades, the UK successfully marshalled the accord in all diplomatic forums and effectively stifled Emperor Haileselassie’s aspirations for irrigational and hydropower development in Ethiopia.

In particular, in the mid 1920’s when Ethiopia was engaged in intimate association with an American company, the J G White Engineering Corporation, and was on the edge of realizing the Tana Dam Project through a concessionary bargain, the vast power and influence of Great Britain was more than enough to sway both the US government and the Company’s executives that in view of the 1902 Treaty, the White Engineering Corporation could not develop the Tana scheme nor any other water control works along the Blue Nile course with out British sanction and participation. In consequence, Ethiopia missed a great opportunity that could have carved the hydro-political configuration of the basin differently than is noted today.

Of course, the Emperor had constantly been aware that the contemporaneous British perceptions and initiatives solely intended to meet the economic and political necessities of the downstream states, and had in consequence disputed the legal basis on which UK’s claims had been formulated.

Yet, in spite of four full-decades of exigent post-Treaty diplomatic wrestle with a domineering colonial neighbor, the agreement’s overtone was too sturdy that his efforts to defend his nation’s legitimate causes had ended in complete wreck. With the independence of Egypt and the Sudan, attended by a bilateral treaty and a complete set of hydraulic and irrigational developments on the ground, Ethiopia’s position has even degenerated.

A similar co-notational qualm recurred shortly after Egypt and Ethiopia, potential woes in prospective Nile waters development claims, hurriedly signed a cooperative accord in July 1991. Under Article IV of the pact, the parties agreed to gear and define their respective rights in accordance with the core principles of international water resources law. In chorus, Article V emphatically required both parties ‘to refrain from engaging in any activity related to the Nile waters that may cause appreciable harm to the interest of the other party.’
Although the initiative to restructure and reconcile Ethio-Egyptian relations and thereby institute equitable pattern of water uses was a commendable commission, the ensuing developments have simply revealed that in anticipating genuine and swift changes in seasoned Egyptian policies, the Ethiopian Government had in deed displayed an act of naivety and imprudence.
Egyptian authorities disconnected the overall context of the 1991 Agreement, maneuvered to highlight only the fitting parts, and campaigned to read the accord as restricting Ethiopia’s rights of undertaking development projects that adversely affect the River’s flow down the stream. Two-pronged dialogues foreseen under the deal were never held, nor a joint technical commission projected to work on the details of the arrangement established. If only belatedly, of course, the Ethiopian Government had grasped Egypt’s wicked diplomatic machination and furiously snapped against its bad faith and streamlined ploy. If anything, the incident was more than an exemplary lesson that trading with a cunning and intransigent regional power requires a far more subtlety.
Today, where the basin states have found themselves at the crossroads of an important historical juncture where a comprehensive legal regime regulating the Nile River is about to be adopted, the diplomatic and juridical dexterity is even more imperative. With out a display of political prudence and wide-ranging professional scrutiny, there is no guarantee that the proposed regional agreement on future utilization of the Nile River in the ten riparian states would not fall prey to Egyptian veiled plot, and once again distress Ethiopia’s interests.
The Nile has always remained a collective jewel of all the riparian states. It is quite evident, however, that in bilateral and international discourses, only Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan have genuinely battled for factual and legal control of the resource. It is not therefore astounding that under the regional initiative working on a basin wide framework, Ethiopia alone has constantly found itself at odds with positions advocated by Sudan and Egypt.

One issue of unending contention has been the fate of old colonial agreements. In defense of its legitimate claims, and quite naturally so, Ethiopia has for decades looked to contentiously structured and vaguely defined principles of international law governing the use of trans-boundary water resources. In ordered diplomatic altercation, it has campaigned to obliterate downstream misconception that it is endowed with adequate rainfall, and had repeatedly called for rectification of the inequitable use of the Nile resources. Although the exact setting and prominence of the principle is still contested, it has in multiple forums demanded Egypt and Sudan to unequivocally embrace the principle of equitable utilization. Its Nile related development strategy has generally been premised on the fundamental assumption that if any, limitations against Ethiopia’s freedom of use of the river’s resources shall only stem from the new international legal order, hence deriding all colonial-era treaty undertakings and ‘self-proclaimed prescriptive quotas’ of any substantive import.

For Egypt, on the other hand, the ‘sanctity of the established pattern of water use’ has simply been as paramount as the question of its own existence. Two water sharing agreements signed with Great Britain in 1929 and the Sudan in 1959 and Ethiopia’s utter state of absence from the scene have so far done the job. In fact, beyond the ‘quota’ it has traditionally enjoyed under the 1959 Agreement with Sudan, the execution of new agricultural land reclamation programs in the Toshka and Sinai districts has skyrocketed its total annual water requirements to about 70 BCM, i.e. only slightly lesser than the entire average annual surge of the Nile River. With in the regional initiative, a ‘clean slate’ approach under any guise would therefore leave the extensive irrigation and hydraulic works developed over a century without adequate security. It can barely permit the new framework to supersede the old treaties unless the framework entitles it to water security of at least the volume it has customarily drawn on.

In legal parlance, this can be achieved in several ways, and most notably, by demanding basin states to officially recognize a quantified volume of waters or by inserting in a treaty an express stipulate urging contracting parties ‘not to cause significant harm’ against each other. This downstream conception, invariably employed by states with already established irrigational and hydraulic works, effectively forestalls impending dangers occasioned through unilateral withdrawal of waters by late-coming states situated upstream, including of course, Ethiopia.

Ethiopia’s stand on the fate of the old colonial agreements should be unequivocal. It had simply endured enough ill treatment in the past century that the new arrangement shall not be allowed to serve, even obliquely, as instrument of continued legitimacy of downstream stakes at its own expenses. How this can in fact be achieved and what approach is adopted in a particular scenario is simply left for assessment of duly appointed government negotiators who enjoy access to substantive details of the prospective accord.

By way of caution, though, it can be pointed that if Ethiopia’s high stakes are to be satisfied and the new document is to represent some thing more than ostentatious political demonstration, the framework arrangement shall not be stuffed with pompous and controvertible principles which shall call for decades of clarification before the nation can draw on its natural waters.

Whereas it remains a pity that the legal framework will not be structured in a mode that expressly quantifies Ethiopia’s equitable shares, future institutional dealings must certainly be geared along this course. If lofty principles are incorporated, and inevitably they would, extensive orientation should be sought beforehand to grasp their precise contents and ramifications in contemporary international water resources law discourse, and most importantly, the imminence of the concept of ‘equitable utilization’ over the principle that advocates the ‘duty not to cause harm’ must be explicitly hammered out.

It is evident that Ethiopia’s legitimate share can be guaranteed only if Egypt and Sudan, who currently consume the entire annual flood, consent to proportional reduction of their water uses. If Ethiopia shall evocatively benefit from the scheme, any endeavour that works on equitable shares of the Ethiopian state shall not overplay the relative impact of prior uses and established hydraulic structures down the stream. Without unwarranted prejudice to legitimate water security concerns of Egypt and Sudan, existing facilities and precedents of use shall make out only one of the manifold factors conjointly considered in the process of determining equitable benefits.

And as such, Ethiopia must vigorously advocate a position that would ultimately secure as much water as is practical, in relative terms, and clutch the resource base materially used to rid itself from the cycle of drought and famine that has for long defined its existence.


The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of nazret.com. The views are solely that of the author.
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msg Comment from: A.Aklilu [Visitor]
Thanks for your contribution.

Probably good to inform the readers about the reference by Prof. Kinfe Abraham regarding Nile and the Nile Basin Initiative. This book is a must read for those interested. It provides a historical backdrop and current frameworks for development endeavors. In addition the full potentials and politica entricacies particularly between Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan are somewhat explained well compared to the other references I got to read.
PermalinkPermalink 08/10/08 @ 17:47

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msg Comment from: d [Visitor]
The reason why this is not solved after centuries is because of the failure to modernize the country. It's very unfortunate that Sudan, Egypt (and Libya) feel they can bully Ethiopia around but don't blame them. Blame Ethiopia's previous autocratic monarchies which could have improved the country as a whole instead of frolicking around the world without doing anything for the country. How sad is it that Ethiopia, a country that has been independent for over 2000 years cannot take on Egypt/Sudan, countries that have been slaves to the powers for over 2000 years. If we had proper successive governments in the 20th century, that had a long-term vision for the country, then we wouldn't have to "beg" Egypt and Sudan to lower their share of the nile. We would just have imposed it upon them. Thankfully this dilemma is just temporary. What I would do to solve this is to
1) Integrate the armies of Ethiopia and its neighbours with the promise of rewards for our neighbours.
2) Break the umbilical chord between Egypt and Sudan by making a secret nile water deal with Sudan and effectively cutting out Egypt in the process.
3) Forge greater ties with the US and Israel to have them on our side in the context of the security and "war on terror. Since Egypt has Britain on their side then we should have the US on our side.
4) Build greater relationships with South Sudan, Dibouti, Puntland, Somaliland, Kenya and Uganda. I'm talking economic, geo-political: the works.
5) Make agricultural deals with the Gulf countries to provide them with food production security in turn for turning away from Egypt.

This is not an easy task but it's not difficult either. This problem is temporary.
PermalinkPermalink 08/10/08 @ 19:34

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msg Comment from: myka [Visitor]
excellent read.
there was a period in the 1920's when Jan Hoy was going to secure Ethiopia's food supply and agricultural needs forever! But of course....Egypt and her colonial protector Britain put a stop to that.

Ethiopia has been in constant trouble with food supply ever since...and even more worrying, Ethiopia's position is now weaker because she has to focus on her renegade province Eritrea instead of worrying about the REAL PROBLEM- Egypt and the Nile River.
PermalinkPermalink 08/10/08 @ 22:33

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msg Comment from: EthioLuV [Visitor]
One enemy at a time.

We must bring down woyane, kill shabia, leave Somali alone unite our people to regain our balance. After all, it is with in our territories of the water if we were to build dams or irrigation systems. Who is to say we can't if we have a strong barganing position?

No wonder Egypt, Lybia and some other arab states created and supported this thorn, shabia. We have some fish to fry now but bigger ones await... when will our problems end?
PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 00:51

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msg Comment from: myka [Visitor]
ethioLuv,

Ethiopia has dealt with Italy, Britain, France, Saide Barre's Somalia, Nasser's Egypt, Mahdist Sudan, Amhed Gragn the Left-handed, European fascism, and the Soviet Union at separate points in history.. Believe me Ethiopia always prevails.

Ethiopia has always prevailed because she works only for equality and fairness. We are not asking for much, just for our OWN GODDAMN WATER! It belongs to us, and we shall use it as we see fit.
PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 14:20

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msg Comment from: Eyob [Visitor]
EthioLuV,
You are missing the point. 17 years and Weyane is still in power and I don't think it will be gone soon. Whoever is in power, we should make sure that we benefit from any treaty that we are signing. In the article, it is mentioned that Egypt and Ethiopia signed a deal back in July 1991, just few month after EPRDF took control - I am sure for the Egyptians, it was a perfect time since the country was not at a stable point and its leaders naive and rushed us to make a deal. Anyways, my point is - it is like you said one at a time but also priority matters.

PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 14:27

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msg Comment from: c´moi senait [Visitor]
Whooo again! The people of Egypte are our brothers and sister! This JAmboo,Niftam Asstessaseb is not going to lead us to the 21th centurey. Let me just remind you ONE thing . According to an ISRAEL economist, ethiopia ARE NOT using it´s Rivers by 97%. I am talking about other rivers which are very useful for agriculture, El and other things. Why NILE?? We could n´t even build a small Dam for farming and EL, here we Rush to Abay. MAN wake up!! I know how what is BEST for ethiopia in todays political and economical agenda. Abay can be used for erigation and El. but Why not start with those other rivers we have ,and still we think that we can solv hunger problem just by using Abay as a political weapon and bring A never ending WAR in the region.Come on guys? Are n´t they Sudanies or Egyptians farmers our African brother and sisters? What is Next, Shabile river which croses to Somalia and starve them all??
PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 14:47

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msg Comment from: c´moi senait [Visitor]
Taddesse Kassa
Have you been drinking the River Nile Water in egypte or Discusses the matter with Yarid Kebede chewing a Ktat?? I remeber him in Alliance France.
PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 14:51

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msg Comment from: ewnetun tenageru [Visitor]
This article as detailed as possible for serious Ethiopians who want to discuss real issues without being too technical and boring to the average reader. Now the average Ethiopian can say my eyes are open. We now know that Egypt takes over 80% of our water from the Nile and Sudan some more. With what is left can Ethiopia survive? What can Ethiopia do to feed its people of over 80 million that continue to grow in numbers exponentially? Are Ethiopians to starve forever because the British pressured Emperor Menilik to sign an unfair treaty more than a century ago? What are our options in the international framework to redress this imbalance? All serious Ethiopians should discuss this issue maturely without resorting to bombastic and inflammatory rhetoric. The Ethiopian government should include among its delegates people like the writer of this article to guide them through the minefields of international treaties and the cunning cross relationships of adversaries and mediators. Ultimately, we can always say NO to any agreement proposal and in the short run it will be no worse than what we already have. However, if a deal is possible it may be best to have it be one that expire after a period of time, say ten years. We will then review it to see if it works for us. If not we will have the right to renegotiate for a better deal down the road. In the meantime, the deal should incorporate a provision that Egypt and Sudan pay for Ethiopia’s water at an agreed fee indexed to the cost of oil. In any case there can no agreement that does not include a substantial increase of Ethiopia’s water rights. Why should we agree to the status qua to continue? One may ask why don’t we just build dams and irrigate and see what they will do. I don’t believe we can do that unless the international community backs us financially and politically. In this matter, it is unlikely to happen. Egypt is more valuable to America than Ethiopia. It is as simple as that.

Quite often our leaders have failed to grasp the consequences of rush agreement with third parties. This was demonstrated when they failed to secure Assab for Ethiopia during the Eritrean breakaway negotiation and the repeat of the same at the end of the last war with Eritrea. It was compounded by the Algiers’ agreement when they surrendered their rights and duty to challenge the arbitrators. That is why we need the help of the experts like the writer who are proficient in the legal and historical context of this matter. Conversely, the general public should encourage all such experts to help in the process rather than accusing the experts as agents of Woyane.
GOVERNMENTS MAY COME AND GO BUT WE SHOULD ALWAYS BE READY TO PROTECT ETHIOPIA NO MATTER WHO GOVERNS IT. LET US BE UNITED.
PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 15:14

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msg Comment from: Debunker [Visitor]

A very comlex historical phenomen it is, indeed.

Many people blieve that the main reason for the military success of the former Eritrean and Tigrian rebels over Mengustu H/Mariam's government was because of the all-round support they enjoyed from the anti-ethiopia Arab countries, particularly Egypt and the Sudan.
The Nile river is a life sustaining anchor for these Arab countries. Particularly, for Egypt it is a matter of death or life, when it comes to the use of the Nile River.Both Egypt & Sudan did/do every thing in their power to keep off Ethiopia's right to properly use the Abay river and its tributaries.
In the eyes of these neighbouring countries, a united, militarly and economically powerful Ethiopia amounts to life threatening nightmare. Thus, every possible means of weakening and disitegrating the Ethiopian State was/is seen as legimate.


The contribution of the former Ethiopian rulers to the cause of their foes:

Ironically, the past Ethiopian ruling elites also helped blindly the plans of their arab enemies to succed by virtue of their wrongful political policies. They believed that nobility,political power and the Ethiopian National Palace should absolutely be reserved only for Amharic speaking ethnic group of the multinational country. Under those reactionary regimes,even in the cabinet ministrial official appointments level, ethnic names like Hagos, Tolla, Bodena or Zeberga were unthinkable. This policy paved a way for resentment and grievance from the deprived "second class ethiopian citizens" side.

The ethnicity problem seems something totally unique from the ethiopian perspective. There are/were many countries which have the same multinational composition like ethiopia. Take for example the former USSR or Yogoslavia, who had less racial bias in comparision to ethiopia. Josph Stalin was born and grew up in Georgia, spoke Russinan in Georgian accent. But that didn't deter him from being an authocractic ruler of the Super Power Soviet Union. The same is true with the former Yugoslavia. Marshal Tito was a Croatian and still there wasn't any pitfall that held him away to be the strongest man of the former yugoslavia, a country dominated by the serb ethnic group.This kind of liberal mentality was almost inexistet in the former Ehiopian political system. There were some personalities from the subject ethnic catagory who were previlaged to join the higher ruling nobility establishments, but was only after they had completely changed their identities (birth names or religion, etc).

Caused by this long lasting ethnic favoretism, the disatisfaction swelled up to an overflow edge and attractedd the perpetual call of the arab counties that wished Ethiopia to remain poor and weak.
Well, the arabs finally succeed to achieve their goals thanks to the visionless former Ethiopian ruling ethnic favoratists.

And now what ?
Ethiopia has got another breed of ruling ethnic power. It came to power by violence, because it thought power sharing through domocratic process was impossible in Ethiopian politics. The present rulers shall stick to power at 4-Kilo State Office as far as they could keep their military superiority. The logic reason is, if they relinquish power through democratic election process, they think the next incoming government would never be an ethiopian governmnt, which means a government of a previlaged uni-tribe.They are afraid of turning in their labour intensive earned power to another "one single ethnic party", which would surely doesn't accept a democratic system that allows an equal and balanced participation of all nationalities in the political affairs of Ethiopia.
This is the biggest dillema that the country will face in the near upcoming future times.
How far would the alternative political party be open-minded and free of ethnic superiority cancer ?

The possibilities of the country called Ethiopian's rise or downfall (disintegration) scenaries need to be seen in this angle of view.
PermalinkPermalink 08/11/08 @ 17:54

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msg Comment from: challenger [Member]
It is not a lack or shortage of rivers or water that is causing starvation in Ethiopia -- Nile is not the only river in Ethiopia. There are other rivers like Awash and Omo (Gebe) that have a much better irrigation potential than Nile. The main reason as to why we can't impose our will on Sudan and Egypt is our inability to circumvent their and their backers' tactic in blocking funding for projects targeting Nile and its tributaries. That means not just losing in the diplomatic front but losing in building local capacity (the inability to accumulate local capital). If we can't utilize other rivers that have better potential for irrigation than Nile, to stave of famine and accumulate wealth, how can we blame the Sudanese and Egyptians for playing hardball in the international arena where Sudan with its lucrative oil basins and Egypt with its strategic importance, both of which are increasingly national security issues to the ever competing world powers, play a dominant role in maneuvering the international water usage laws and treaties, not just successfully blocking any attempt to secure funds? There are two issues we need to address to effectively solve the majority of our problems, including food insecurity (which is also quickly becoming a national security issue to the entire world). First, let's quit undermining our own country's interest by allying with our enemies, to win a petty, temporary dominance in a compromised and weakened country. Our hunger to dominate one another should never come at our country's expense (our people's hunger). Second, emphasize local talent (creativity, not just imitation) development and wealth accumulation (local potential,) to be able to do what is in our best interest, to be self-sufficient, and further immunize ourselves from undue outside influence and manipulation. Without such concrete measures, self-restraint and sacrifice, it is very hard to see Ethiopia as a serious country.
PermalinkPermalink 08/12/08 @ 02:09

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msg Comment from: Visionary [Visitor]
Mr. Kassa,

It's a pleasure to read your research paper regarding an issue that has universal implication. Your desire for historical accuracy and your intellectual honesty is refreshing, to say the least. I look forward to read your work on other subjects, particularly on legal treaties successive Ethiopian governments have entered into over the years.

Regards.
PermalinkPermalink 08/12/08 @ 12:16

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msg Comment from: Aboye [Visitor]
That is a nonsense contract that expired with the colonial rule of the British in Sudan and Egypt. The colonial rule from its inception was a devilish scheme to loot and commit crimes against humanity especially to all non-Anglo humans.

So even Emperor Menelik II was forced to accept the Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty there is no reason now to preserve that outlaw, pirates colonial contract that subjugated Africans to their sufferings. The Emperor was not on a leveled field for negotiations but to risk his country go down into slavery and colony.

What was for the Emperor to do? If he had said no then how can he back it up since Britain has the mighty force that will swallow Ethiopia in minutes?

The important thing now is what has/is the current regime has done/doing to restore the interest of Ethiopia expect begging for money and food aid?

This issue surfaced before the 2005 election and died right after the election chaos. And I am afraid that is what is going on now, raising national issues to divert attention and drop it once power is secured.

This can only be solved when the govermnet is backed by its people not by foreign aid.
PermalinkPermalink 08/12/08 @ 14:42

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msg Comment from: observer [Visitor]
This is a nice article. If Ethiopians had a chance to have a leader that protects its natural resources and sovereignty, this would have been the major issue all of us to put efforts.
It is not an easy matter especially when we have so many issues regarding internal matters such as bad governance, ethnic federalism, disunity absence of nationalism etc.

Why was a meeting called upon about Nile in 1991? That was an ideal time to our adversaries who thought that Ethiopia is at its weakest point so that easy concession is possible because the self appointed rebel government was yet in the looting mood than being responsible in national issues. They did it anyway.

Let me remind you some historical events in connection with this issue.
Why was Atse Hailesellasie visiting Brazil in the 60s? What happen during his visit?
Despite the brutal colonialists and our adversaries pressure, Atse Haile Sellasie was doing his homework in every aspect diplomatically which he was very good at it and all possible moments to utilize Blue Nile. The 60s was its moment according to him he decided no matter what because he thought he had modern defense put in place and young Ethiopians were graduating to do the developing of Ethiopia.
He decided that he will move the capital from Addis Ababa to Tana. His justification was that the lake as well as the river will have adequate resources to feed the growing population of Ethiopia hence, agriculture, fisheries, hydro electric power based on Tana and Abay was ready to go.

The Brazil visit was to gain first hand experience how countries manage changing their capital. Remember his dream was changed into an overnight nightmare. While at Brazil he got the news that a coup was going on to overthrow him. His own son and his best man Workineh Gebeyehu were even among the conspirators. He went back home momentarily to cleanup the mess and his plan was shattered due to this incidence.

Imagine how difficult we Ethiopians are to get united for common goal today. The same Ethiopians were there in his time too. His dream never came true.

I hope one day we will be united and protect our God given resources. It is only a curse where we will perish due to hunger and thirsty while we have Abay.
PermalinkPermalink 08/12/08 @ 17:38

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msg Comment from: observer [Visitor]
Dear Debunker, I agree with most of what you said but I disagree with you on the following You said..
"The contribution of the former Ethiopian rulers to the cause of their foes:

Ironically, the past Ethiopian ruling elites also helped blindly the plans of their arab enemies to succed by virtue of their wrongful political policies. They believed that nobility,political power and the Ethiopian National Palace should absolutely be reserved only for Amharic speaking ethnic group of the multinational country. Under those reactionary regimes,even in the cabinet ministrial official appointments level, ethnic names like Hagos, Tolla, Bodena or Zeberga were unthinkable. This policy paved a way for resentment and grievance from the deprived "second class ethiopian citizens" side"

First of all I will not say that the former rules were perfect. Not at all. If you review the history of Ethiopia we had so many up and downs in our history where we used to have kings and kingdoms and king of kings where all have their respective duties on their jurisdictions.
If we start with Minilik, Yes according to the Solomonic dynastic nobility rule, the Ras is reserved for Solomonic line or married to Solomonic line. But the rest chunk of the important and decisive powers were open to any body. Many Oromos Gurages Tigres you name it were holding key positions in government and they were playing key decision roles at every step of the national issues. Remember Taitu was not Amhara. Fitawrari Habtegiorgis was not Amhara, Balcha Abanefso was not Amhara. Yes as you said there were many who change their names but never forced to do so.
The government of Haile Sellasie Cabinet ministers were as fully diversified as no time ever. If I list the top leaders surrounding him, amharas were the minority.
Haile Sellasie was not tribalist like Meles, Neither Minilik.

In fact both rulers have never favour their ethnic home land at the expense of others when they make roads, schools, developments.
PermalinkPermalink 08/12/08 @ 18:13

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msg Comment from: TEDDY [Visitor]
Another TPLF thugs propagandas to incriminate Menelike for living the sovereignty on the Blue Nile to the British Colonialism. Never this monarch accepted to leave the sovereignty of Ethiopia to any foreingn Country .The only known British agent in the country was Yohanes of Tigrai who rendered so many services for them even giving his life at Metema(a land actually given by Zenawi to El Bechir).Unfortunatly ,thanks of the TPLF regime ,Egypt can do what ever it wants on this river .Soon or later Ethiopia will be obliged to exploit the Blue Nile Water Ressources .Regions like Mota or Beni Shagul where this river pass do not even have clean water services or electricity powers .Abay is the historical property of Ethiopia , so why its peoples have the right to exploit the ressources.
PermalinkPermalink 08/13/08 @ 05:10

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