Ethiopia ‘deploys missiles’ as Nile dispute with Egypt escalates

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Tensions dramatically escalated between Ethiopia and Egypt on Monday and Tuesday as Addis Ababa announced it would not postpone the filling of the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), and President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ordered the Egyptian armed forces to be on the “highest state of alert”.
Ethiopia also reportedly deployed anti-aircraft missiles in the vicinity of the Renaissance Dam.

Negotiations between Egypt and Ethiopia over the dam, which is being built on the Blue Nile river, broke down in March after Addis Ababa refused to sign a US-drafted agreement regulating the filling of the dam, saying that it was entitled to fill it at its own pace.

Both Egypt and Sudan have expressed strong opposition to Ethiopia unilaterally filling the dam without an agreement, with Cairo concerned it will greatly reduce its supply of life-giving Nile water, causing drought and famine, especially if it is filled too quickly.

Ethiopia plans to begin filling the dam in July, when the Blue Nile river begins flooding. On Monday, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew said his country “sees no reason to postpone the filling of the reservoir of its dam”.

In an interview with the Ethiopian News Agency, acting Foreign Ministry spokesman Amsalu Tizazu said Ethiopia was under no obligation to notify either Egypt or Sudan about when the dam would be filled.

Read more: Ethiopia's Great Renaissance Dam - A catastrophe for Egypt?

Ethiopia envisions filling the dam with 4.9 billion cubic metres of water between July and early next year, and wants to begin a trial operation of the dam in March 2021. It says that the dam is essential to its future development.

The new Ethiopian unilateralism concerning the dam stands in sharp contrast to previous agreements between Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia, such as the 2015 Declaration of Principles on Nile Water.

In previous years, Egypt indicated that it was prepared to take military action to secure its supply of Nile water and in 2013 Egyptian officials were recorded discussing ways to stop the building of Ethiopia’s dam, including an aerial bomb attack.

On Tuesday, President Sisi met with Defence Minister Mohammed Zaki and other military chiefs and called on the Egyptian armed forces to be “at the highest level of preparedness, ready to defend Egypt’s national security”. This was in response to militant activity in Sinai and setbacks suffered by Egypt’s ally, rogue General Khalifa Haftar, in Libya, as well as the impasse with Ethiopia over the dam.

The New Arab’s Arabic-language service quoted sources from Ethiopia’s opposition Tigray People’s Liberation Front party as saying that earlier this month, Ethiopia began deploying an anti-aircraft missile system around the Renaissance Dam in order to defend it against a possible strike.

The deployment of the missiles is expected to be completed in June. Ethiopia reportedly obtained the missiles from Russia among other countries.

However, observers believe that while Egypt considers the Ethiopian dam as an existential threat, a military conflict between the two countries is unlikely to take place in the immediate future.

Two weeks ago, Egypt sent a letter to member states of the UN Security Council complaining of Ethiopia’s actions and calling for a resumption of internationally-mediated negotiations.

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Yahya

2020 GRANDMASTER
VIP
I'm all for this and all, but can egypt promise us galbeed if we give them quick access from our borders if sudan refuses?

Also they must help us break the arms embargo and help us annex NFD. If egypt is smart we will play along.


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Diaspora ambassador

''Dagaalka gala'' Garaad Jaamac Garaad Cali
VIP
If i was occupying villa somalia, i would make this issue an arab league issue.

Lobbying the arab league that the arab waters in sudan and egypt are under threat.

To create another yemen in east africa a place where the league sends it's armies to train and a place where the league controlls africa, as africans gringly look up to ethiopua.
 

Automaton

The founder of Somali Civil Liberties Union(SCLU)
Ethiopia has the right to build this dam, which mean cheap electricity to Somali Galbeed. Egypt thinks its above all African countries around the Nile basin. Although Egypt is stronger, they can't afford the cost of a full-blown war. We stay neural and watch.
 
sister @xabashi your thoughts?

The dam was under high security surveillance 24/7 by the military from day one. I know from personal sources that fighter jets were also deployed to the Bahir Dar Airport from day one. So this is not news in my view.

Anyway, Egypt few hours ago already accepted to come back to the old tripartite negotiation table between the three countries (Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt) after withdrawing from it and instead trying all diplomatic routes via the US and the UN to pressure Ethiopia didn't brought the expected results. The UN secretary general also poured cold water on Egypt's request and recommended that all parties to go back to the tripartite negotiation table. Ethiopia will not give its sovereign rights on its own resources to nobody and we will start filling the dam in two months time as planned. Now the crazy US president is out of the negotiation, the three countries could reach to a win-win solution.

 
I'm all for this and all, but can egypt promise us galbeed if we give them quick access from our borders if sudan refuses?

Also they must help us break the arms embargo and help us annex NFD. If egypt is smart we will play along.


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Sounds like a prayer to Allah. It needs too many miracles to happen at the same time. Stop chewing that thing :)
 

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