Thursday, June 13, 2013

Ethiopia forges ahead with their economic plans ....

and building the $4.7 billion Great Renaissance Dam is definitely the major part of that economy.  The Muslim Brotherhood's Egypt can go cry in the wind with their threats of war.   Five other  countries, through which the Nile runs, have also joined Ethiopia in doing away with the colonial-era treaties.   The colonial powers had no right to impose their will on the natives of those lands by drawing up treaties favoring the country that was the most enslaved to the colonial masters ... Egypt.   Ethiopia should have disregarded those treaties long ago.

Aaron Maasho writing at Reuters:
....Ethiopia's parliament unanimously ratified on Thursday a treaty that strips Egypt of its right to the lion's share of the Nile river waters, raising the political temperature in a dispute between Cairo and Addis Ababa over the construction of a dam.
The parliament's move follows days of irate exchanges between two of Africa's most populous nations over Ethiopia's new hydroelectric plant, which Egypt fears will reduce a water supply vital for its 84 million people.
Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi said on Monday he did not want "war" but would keep "all options open", prompting Ethiopia to say it was ready to defend its $4.7 billion Great Renaissance Dam near the border with Sudan.
Six Nile basin countries including Ethiopia have signed a deal effectively stripping Cairo of its veto, which is based in colonial-era treaties, over dam projects on the Nile, source of nearly all Egypt's water.
Ethiopia's late leader Meles Zenawi had delayed parliamentary ratification until Egypt elected a new government.
"Most of the upstream countries have approved it through their parliaments. We delayed it as a gesture of goodwill to the people of Egypt until a formal elected government was in place," Ethiopian government spokesman Bereket Simon told Reuters.
"We have a principled stance on the construction of dams. We are determined to see our projects brought to completion."
Another government spokesman, Shimeles Kemal, said Ethiopia's 547-seat legislature had voted to "incorporate the treaty into domestic law"........

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