KHARTOUM, Sudan
Sudan on Tuesday announced its rejection of an Ethiopian proposal regarding the filling and operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), said Sudan’s Irrigation and Water Resources Ministry in a statement.
According to the statement, Sudan
rejected the Ethiopian proposal as it stipulates that an agreement should only
be about the first phase of the filling of the GERD, while it links the
agreement with reaching a comprehensive treaty regarding the Blue Nile water.
The precondition for Sudan’s participation
in the Nile dam talks is that an agreement on the filling and operation of the
GERD should not be linked with reaching a treaty on the Blue Nile water, it
said.
Sudanese Irrigation and Water
Resources Minister Yasir Abbas sent a letter to South Africa’s minister of
international relations and cooperation concerning Ethiopia’s changed stance,
the statement said.
It noted that Abbas thought a
message from his Ethiopian counterpart on Tuesday prompted “serious concerns
regarding the course of the current talks, the progress achieved and the
understandings reached.”
“The Ethiopian proposal
represents a great change in the Ethiopian stance and threatens the
continuation of the talks led by the African Union,” said Abbas, adding that
the proposal constitutes a violation of the Declaration of Principles signed by
Sudan, Egypt and Ethiopia in March, 2015.
On Monday, Sudan, Egypt and
Ethiopia resumed a new round of talks on the filling and operation of the GERD.
Ethiopia, which started building
the 4-billion-dollar GERD in 2011, expects to produce over 6,000 megawatts of
electricity to push the country’s development.
Egypt, a downstream Nile Basin country that relies on the river for its fresh water, is concerned that the dam might affect its 55.5-billion-cubic-meter annual share of the water resources. - Africa
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