Sudan: completion of the dam that maintains the diplomatic boulevard



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Around the world these days, it has been keenly aware of Ethiopia’s innocent approach to ensuring fair, equitable and global water sharing to promote common growth and development of the region in general and of the riparian countries in particular.

High-level diplomacy, roundtable discussions and lighthearted approaches have been welcomed by this great East African nation since the cornerstone for the construction of the dam was laid on the Abay River. Although Egypt’s intermittent status has given Ethiopia and Sudan difficulties in reaching a lasting agreement, Ethiopia’s alpha and omega stance and principles have been upheld solely by swift diplomacy and civility-filled cooperation, as the nation he knows very well that no one benefits from confrontation.

The waters of Abay are excellent for quenching the thirst for development and prosperity of all riparian countries if they are exploited in a healthy way and managed cooperatively. However, the problem arises when a single nation wishes to exclusively monopolize it and make use of it, taking outdated colonial narratives for granted. The feeling of selfishness and the mere suspicion of water shortages and widespread drought must be eradicated from the minds of some riparian countries like Egypt.

In the age of globalization, where the world is becoming a small village attached to the web, and even the African continent is moving towards the creation of the United States of Africa (USA), it is surprising that the big three African nations, Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan have so far failed to end the negotiation over the waters of Ethiopia’s Great Renaissance Dam.