EGYPT AND SUDAN REJECT KINSHASA NEGOTIATED RIVER NILE PACT

EGYPT AND SUDAN ARE INSISTING ON FRESH NEOTIATIONS AND NEW RIVER NILE WATER PACT WITH RIPARIAN COUNTRIES IN TOTAL DISREGARD TO KINSHASA AGREEMENT..
News Analysis By Leo Odera Omolo

Egyptian and Sudanese government have jointly disowned the agreement signed last month in Kinshasa, DR Congo by country members of the Nile Basin Commission.

The two nations have written a joint protest note to other Nile Basin countries, saying that the original agreement that gave the downstream countries superior rights over the use of River Nile waters were still binding on all, despite the recent adoption of legislation opposed to the agreements in the colonial era.

The protest note from Egypt and Sudan means that the two countries have hastily backed down from the recent decision taken by Nile Basin countries at a meeting of the Nile Council of Ministers {Nile Com}in Kinshasa, DR Congo, to go ahead and sign a new agreement to govern the use of River Nile waters, while temporarily shelving a controversial article that has delayed signing of the pact for years.

The two countries described the decision to go ahead with a new agreement as ” A violations of the consensus” principles which has been the basis of the Nile COM decisions all along and would undoubtedly ignore and disregard all joint efforts that the Nile Basin countries exerted on the issue for more than ten years.”

The two downstream countries have instead asked Nile Basin countries to return to the negotiation table and resolve pending issues in the draft Nile pact before signing.

The letter signed by the Egyptian Minister for Water Resources and Irrigation Mohamed Nasr El-din Allam and the Sudanese Minister for Irrigation and Water Resources Kamal Ali Mohamed reads in parts; “Egypt and Sudan invite the seven upstream Nile Basin countries to return to the negotiation table to resolve all pending issues including article 14 and the other articles concerning prior notification and consensus.

However, Egypt and Sudan reserve their rights based on principles and norms of public international law, in particular their rights based on the “existing agreements” which are by their nature binding to all Nile Basin countries”.

The new agreement would have paved the way for the establishment of a permanent river-basin commission whose first and foremost task will be to resolve the pending articles that addresses the sensitive matter of water security.

Individually, it emerged that Egypt and Sudan have divergent views on alternatives to dealing with issues pending resolution in the agreement after Sudan wrote another letter to the chairman of the Nile Com, Jose Endundo of DR Congo opposing Egypt’s proposal to form an independent committee with limited constitution to resolve the issue of water security rights. Egypt is going back to the very foundations of their position to have the new pact acknowledge current uses and rights of River Nile waters,.reasoning that the old agreements meant well for countries like Egypt that relied on the river as the only sources of water.

The Sudan delegation had left the Kinshasa meeting prematurely, leaving Egypt in a weak negotiating position against a popular view of the other states, that they should sign the new pact, and reserve controversial issues for later resolution.

The other Nile Basin countries are Burundi, Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda DR. Congo, Uganda and Ethiopia. In order to strike a compromise, Egypt had earlier suggested that an independent committee including itself and Sudan be constituted to deal with the pending issue on water security rather than leaving it to the new Commission when established.

But interestingly, Sudan opposed this move in a separate letter it wrote to Mr Endundo. It reads as follows;”The government of Sudan does not agree to the formation of a committee of ministers from the eastern Nile, the Equatorial lake region, Egypt and Sudan and one or two experts from international organizations to formulate an acceptable text as proposed by Egypt.”

The Nile Basin Initiative Secretariat was preparing to send documents to respective governments for reviewing ahead of commencement of signing next month, when Egypt and Sudan all of a sudden sent their letter.

It could not be immediately established whether Mr. Endundo had replied to the letters, by the time of writing this article.

leooderaomolo@yahoo.com

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Date: Mon, 22 Jun 2009 23:30:18 -0700 (PDT)
From: Leo Odera Omolo
Subject: EGYPT AND SUDAN REJECT KINSHASA NEGOTIATED RIVER NILE PACT

One thought on “EGYPT AND SUDAN REJECT KINSHASA NEGOTIATED RIVER NILE PACT

  1. Rizik

    MJPC blames the Congolese Government for the Deteriorating Situation in East Congo(DRC)

    “There is no excuse for missing to pay salaries to soldiers in a lawless eastern Congo for six months”

    Following the deteriorating situation in east Congo, the MJPC called today for the Congolese Government to urgently pay the salaries to thousands of soldiers who have not been paid for over six months in eastern Congo, take swift action to enforce the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) warrant against Bosco Ntaganda and to hold accountable perpetrators of sexual violence against women for their acts.

    “Failing to hold accountable individuals who commit war crimes and crimes against humunity continues to be the leading cause of widespread and systematic sexual violence acts against girls and women in the easten Congo” said Makuba Sekombo, Community Affairs Director of the Mobilization for Justice and Peace in the DR Congo (MJPC).

    Mr. Sekombo again criticized the government of Congo for not only the continuing failure to protect women and young girls from sexual violence, but also for “encouraging conditions that create opportunities for sexual violence to occur”. “There is no excuse for missing to pay salaries to soldiers in a lawless eastern Congo for six months” said Sekombo.

    The MJPC has also renewed its call for the Congolese government to take urgent needed action to end human rights abuses in east Congo, hold perpetrators accountable and ensure reparation for the victims of sexual violence.

    The MJPC has been urging the Congolese government to compensate the victims of sexual violence in order to also help combat impunity in eastern part of Congo where sexual violence against women and children has been widely used as weapon of war for more than decade. The MJPC online petition calling for for help to put pressure on Congolese Government to compensate victims of sexual siolence in Eastern DRC can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com.au/online/26180.html

    About MJPC
    MJPC works to add a voice in advocating for justice and peace in the DRC particulary in the east of DRC where thousands innocent civilian including children and women continue to suffer massive human rights violations while armed groups responsible for these crimes go unpunished

    For more information about the MJPC and its activities, visit http://www.mjpcongo.org. or call Makuba Sekombo @ 1-408-8063-644 or e-mail: info@mjpcongo.org. The online petition calling on the Congolese Government to put urgently in place a comprehensive program of compensation for the victims of sexual violence in eastern Congo can be signed at http://www.gopetition.com.au/online/26180.html

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