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Nile Basin risks water conflict as states dither over ratifying CFA

Saturday October 18 2014
dam

Ethiopia’s Grand Renaissance dam on the Blue Nile. PHOTO | FILE

The Nile Basin is at risk of facing water conflicts if riparian states continue to dither over the ratification of the Co-operative Framework Agreement. The CFA is supposed to come up with a new arrangement on the use of the waters of Africa’s longest river.

Participants from the 10 Nile Basin countries who attended the Fourth Nile Basin Development Forum in Nairobi recently, expressed concern that the ratification was taking too long, creating avenues for tension and water conflicts.

The accord, which was opened for signing in 2010 by the intergovernmental body, the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI), has only been ratified by Ethiopia and Rwanda. Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi, DR Congo, Sudan, South Sudan and Egypt are yet to ratify the accord. Eritrea is an observer.

“We are hoping that co-operation around the Nile will increase security and stability. The key words are equitable and responsible use of the Nile resources. That is the only way we can do this peacefully. Otherwise we are going to be at war because of water,” Kenya’s Environment Cabinet Secretary Judi Wakhungu warned.

READ: Ministers feud over Nile Treaty

The dilemma is that the CFA cannot become operational until at least six countries ratify the  accord. The majority  of the NBI member states  consider the agreement critical in the equitable and wise use of the Nile waters, which are the lifeline of millions of Africans living both upstream and downstream.

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The Nile countries have a combined population of 437 million and more than half of the inhabitants live along the Nile River and its tributaries. As the demand for water increases, the upstream countries find themselves in a difficult position operating under the colonial agreements.

The other challenge facing NBI is bringing Egypt on board after Cairo decided to boycott future negotiations in protest against the CFA, which it says does not guarantee the country adequate water security. Sudan’s Minister for Water and Electricity, Mutaz Salim, who is also the chair of the Nile Council of Ministers, urged Egypt to join the rest of the team in finding solutions to the challenges bedevilling the Nile Basin.

“The objective of the Nile Basin Initiative is to have an all inclusive negotiation,” said the Sudanese Minister.

Egypt has in the past warned it will leave its options open if it feels the country’s water security is threatened, a statement some participants in the Nairobi conference feared could include military intervention.

Early in the year, Egypt’s former ambassador to Ethiopia, Robert Iskandar, told the Cairo Post that the Egyptian government rejects the treaty, as it does not ensure Egypt’s historic share of the Nile water. “ … It cannot gain legitimacy; it ignores the legal rights of the other countries,” Mr Iskandar said.

CFA is an outcome of long negotiations to replace the 1929 treaty written by the then colonial master, Britain, which awarded Egypt veto powers over any project involving the Nile by upstream countries. Sudan and Egypt later signed another deal in 1959 dividing the Nile’s waters between them.

According to the 1959 treaty between Egypt and Sudan, Egypt is entitled to 55.5 billion cubic metres annually of the Nile, while Sudan is entitled to 18.5 billion cubic metres.

The CFA is expected to replace the old agreements by establishing a permanent body the Nile Basin Commission to oversee river management.

“We, the emerging countries do not recognise the 1929 and 1954 agreements because that prevented us from using the Nile water resources,” Prof Wakhungu said.

The Ethiopian parliament ratified the CFA last year amid growing tensions with Egypt over the construction of the Grand Renaissance hydroelectric dam on the Blue Nile. At the time, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya and Burundi had signed the accord. However, none of them has so far ratified it.

READ: Ethiopia says no to Egypt on new study on its dam

Recently, though, Kenya and Tanzania announced their intention to ratify the agreement before the end of the year to help speed up the establishment of the Nile Basin Commission. The Tanzanian Cabinet recently approved the CFA and announced that the document will soon be taken to Parliament for  ratification.

Last year, Uganda’s Minister for Water and Environment, Ephraim Kamuntu, announced that the ratification process was on track. If Tanzania, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya and Uganda join Ethiopia and Rwanda in  ratifying the CFA, then the NBI will be transformed into a  Commission with or without Egypt’s signature. 

According to John Nyaoro, CEO NBI Kenya, Egypt had a problem with Article 14B of the CFA that dwelt on water security.

“When CFA negotiations were concluded it was resolved that the article be annexed and resolved later once the Nile Basin Commission is in place,” he said.

During the negotiations, the Council of Water Ministers of the Nile Basin was unable to reach an agreement on the wording of Article 14B. The words that were the cause of the disagreement read as follows: “... not to significantly affect the water security of any other Nile Basin state.”

However, negotiators from Egypt and Sudan wanted these words to be revised so that they would read: ‘… not to adversely affect the water security and current uses and rights of any other Nile Basin State.”

The final document was adopted by seven votes to one in  May 2009 by the Nile Council of Ministers during an extraordinary  meeting held in Kinshasa. They also agreed that the initial wording of Article 14B should be included in the  CFA instrument and that any dispute about the phrasing should be resolved by the  Nile Basin Commission within six months of its establishment.

All subsequent efforts to get the representatives of Egypt and Sudan to agree with the wording  that the other members wanted failed.

In 2013, Sudanese President, Omar Hassan al-Bashir, softened his stance and declared his country’s support for Ethiopia’s Renaissance dam, claiming that it would not harm Sudan.

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