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( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
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Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) » 14 Jan 2020, 11:05

The Tigray goats and chickens charged with sabotaging weyane's dam will appear in court today. :lol: :lol: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Awash
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Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Awash » 14 Jan 2020, 12:13

( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 11:05
The Tigray goats and chickens charged with sabotaging weyane's dam will appear in court today. :lol: :lol: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :lol: :lol: :lol:
You're still talking about domestic animals when you've got Eritreans (human beings) cooking alive in containers? :oops: :oops: :oops:



Fed_Up
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Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Fed_Up » 14 Jan 2020, 12:23

As I always say agamewoch are not sophisticated. Asswash, the low iq agamew, is trying to misleading the readers by posting a photo that has nothing to do with Eritrea.




Migrants and refugees in Zintan and Gharyan detention centres in Libya Detained



https://www.msf.org/worsening-condition ... ion-centre

Btw- the folks on the image looks like more of Ethiopians than Eritreans.
Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:13
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 11:05
The Tigray goats and chickens charged with sabotaging weyane's dam will appear in court today. :lol: :lol: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :lol: :lol: :lol:
You're still talking about domestic animals when you've got Eritreans (human beings) cooking alive in containers? :oops: :oops: :oops:



Awash
Senior Member+
Posts: 30273
Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Awash » 14 Jan 2020, 12:32

Fed_Up wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:23
As I always say agamewoch are not sophisticated. Asswash, the low iq agamew, is trying to misleading the readers by posting a photo that has nothing to do with Eritrea.




Migrants and refugees in Zintan and Gharyan detention centres in Libya Detained



https://www.msf.org/worsening-condition ... ion-centre

Btw- the folks on the image looks like more of Ethiopians than Eritreans.
Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:13
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 11:05
The Tigray goats and chickens charged with sabotaging weyane's dam will appear in court today. :lol: :lol: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :lol: :lol: :lol:
You're still talking about domestic animals when you've got Eritreans (human beings) cooking alive in containers? :oops: :oops: :oops:


Focked up aka Tebaw shilHo,
"...look more like Ethiopians"? How is that? Moron, even your Agame said "if anyone thinks [they] are two people, that person doesn't know history" or words to that effect.

Last edited by Awash on 14 Jan 2020, 12:35, edited 1 time in total.

Fed_Up
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Posts: 20403
Joined: 15 Apr 2009, 10:50

Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Fed_Up » 14 Jan 2020, 12:35

Asswash bushtiewww qedad moakouru caught red handed.

This is why

Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:32
Fed_Up wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:23
As I always say agamewoch are not sophisticated. Asswash, the low iq agamew, is trying to misleading the readers by posting a photo that has nothing to do with Eritrea.




Migrants and refugees in Zintan and Gharyan detention centres in Libya Detained



https://www.msf.org/worsening-condition ... ion-centre

Btw- the folks on the image looks like more of Ethiopians than Eritreans.
Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:13
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 11:05
The Tigray goats and chickens charged with sabotaging weyane's dam will appear in court today. :lol: :lol: :mrgreen: :mrgreen: :lol: :lol: :lol:
You're still talking about domestic animals when you've got Eritreans (human beings) cooking alive in containers? :oops: :oops: :oops:


Feduuup pls Atubeni shilHo,
"...look more like Ethiopians"? How is that? Moron.


Awash
Senior Member+
Posts: 30273
Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Awash » 14 Jan 2020, 12:40

Tebaw shilHo,
Look who else is getting cooked alive. How many more Real Eritreans have died horrible deaths in Agame deqi komarit's gulags?




Awash
Senior Member+
Posts: 30273
Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Awash » 14 Jan 2020, 13:07

Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Published: 00:00, Jan 14,2020

Are tensions between Egypt and Ethiopia over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam about regional influence or limited resources?

Eman El-Sherbiny asks


TWO of the world’s and Africa’s oldest kingdoms have long unwittingly vied for dominance and influence on the motherland. And though cultural and economic ties seem to have brought Egypt and Ethiopia together on some level, the two power players are at odds regarding the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. But could it be a show of muscles at a time international businesses are rushing to invest in Africa? Or, is it a conflict over limited water and energy resources?

Egypt’s diminishing influence in the Middle East and North Africa might provide a context for the country’s strife for power and sway over the African continent. After Abdel Fattah al-Sissi rose to power at a hefty expense, Egypt’s economy shrunk and crumbled in a way it hasn’t as severely under the former autocratic rule of Mubarak. Less economic opportunities coupled with the regime’s crack-down isolated Egypt and diminished its role in the region.

Having been distant from other African countries, especially culturally, al-Sissi’s Egypt rekindled its relations with the continent through a number of initiatives and investments. Its announced and unannounced intentions are palpable. Egypt’s hegemonic relations with countries like Sudan and Eritrea are a strong ground to Sissi’s desire to have a sturdier role than that in the Middle East.

The North African country was also praised by South Sudanese president, Silva Kirr, for supporting stability in the nascent country. Kiir additionally hailed the developmental initiatives and scholarships provided by Egypt to the South Sudanese. As for other Nile Basin countries, Egypt’s intelligence has assumed a number of posts there. Egypt has also repeatedly supported both Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo in their presidents’ endeavours to seize control unconstitutionally through rejecting the UN’s call for sanctions.

But the most powerful relationship Egypt is refining is with Uganda, an unannounced adversary of Ethiopia.

Ethiopia’s powerplay isn’t dimming, especially after Ethiopia’s prime minister Abiy Ahmed’s win of the Nobel Peace Prize this year. The 42-year-old and youngest African leader is being given the prestigious award in recognition for his peaceful efforts with the neighbouring country, Eritrea, and reaching a peace deal to end an almost 20-year-long border conflict.

The recognition won him wide regional and international praise. It also shed light on his internal reforms, from distancing his administration from the abuses of former ones to giving competent women high posts within his government.

Abiy’s sweeping political and economic reforms garnered a set of interests and investments from the United States and China. And, akin to Egypt’s attempts to cosy up with other Arab countries, Abiy announced in November 2018 the implementation of visa-on-arrival regimes for African travellers.

That along with Abiy’s attempts to alleviate ethnic tensions has moved the country’s ranking up enough to gain major global and regional clout. But are Egypt’s vetoes against filling the GERD as well as its operation trampling said clout?

Egypt has historical precedents of treating the River Nile as its own, from treaties with then-colonial power, Great Britain and Sudan, to direct military threats against Ethiopia. In fact, Egypt aggressively pursued a higher share in its 1959 treaty with Sudan from 48 billion cubic metres to 55.5 billion cubic metres.

Ethiopia continues to reject Egypt’s threatening tone. But is Egypt merely pursuing a hostile attitude to a regional issue or is it a frantic effort to pressure its water supply?

The Nile has been revered since ancient Egypt. Ancient Egyptians actually believed that the Milky Way was but a reflection of the Nile. The river is also an emblem of Egypt’s fertility and culture.

Ninety per cent of Egypt’s water needs come from the River Nile, 60 per cent of which comes from Ethiopia’s Blue Nile, while the rest flows from Sudan’s White Nile. And, with a population of almost 100 million, Egypt has one of the lowest per capita water shares in the world at around 660 cubic metres.

And, while Egypt’s population is projected to reach 140 million by 2050, water shortage is expected to happen as soon as 2025 without the GERD being a factor. According to officials at Egypt’s ministry of irrigation, Egypt would lose 20–30 per cent of its Nile water share which could lead to a 30 per cent decrease in electricity coming from the Aswan Dam.

Also, a Cairo University professor suggested in a study that Egypt could lose up to 51 per cent of its farmland if Ethiopia fills the dam in three years.

While Ethiopia insists the dam won’t highly impact Egypt’s share of water, one main concern stands out which is the high salinity of Egypt’s Nile Delta soil, a largely agricultural area.

With Ethiopia’s ethnic divisions threatening its stability and the country ranking 174th out of 187 countries in a human development report released by the UNDP in 2011, Ethiopia hopes the $4.7 billion hydroelectric project will be crucial for Ethiopia’s frail economy and mostly poor population. At full capacity, the dam should be able to produce over 6,000 megawatts of electricity. This alone should bring the country to the 21st century, especially because Ethiopia has long suffered from severe power shortages as only 44 per cent of its 105 million people have access to electricity. Also, only 42 per cent of the population has access to clean water, only 11 per cent of which can get sanitation services.

Even if it is not a race between countries most in need of water resources, evidence begs the question of whether the dam is both vital and threatening to Ethiopia and Egypt, respectively. It is also rather apparent that both countries are competing for a higher diplomatic status, and the GERD can play an important role in that.


 

OpenDemocracy.net, January 13. Eman El-Sherbiny is a Nairobi-based freelance journalist and has reported from the MENA region before. She is also a managing editor of TheSwitchers.eu, a platform on green initiatives around the Mediterranean region.
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Fed_Up
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Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Fed_Up » 14 Jan 2020, 13:19

Asswash bushtiewww agameew,

Kewedeku behwala meferagT lemelalaT :lol: :lol:

Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:40
fedu aTebaweni shilHoha
Look who else is getting cooked alive. How many more Real Eritreans have died horrible deaths in Agame deqi komarit's gulags?




Awash
Senior Member+
Posts: 30273
Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Awash » 14 Jan 2020, 13:59

Fandiya aka Tebaw shilHo,
When is your Agame god going to release prisoners?
Fed_Up wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 13:19
Asswash [deleted] agameew,

Kewedeku behwala meferagT lemelalaT :lol: :lol:

Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:40
fedu aTebaweni shilHoha
Look who else is getting cooked alive. How many more Real Eritreans have died horrible deaths in Agame deqi komarit's gulags?




Fed_Up
Senior Member+
Posts: 20403
Joined: 15 Apr 2009, 10:50

Re: Ethiopia’s dam: a lifeline or a show of power?

Post by Fed_Up » 14 Jan 2020, 14:29

Embiyewwwww ayeTubeka.... Kiid gah bel. Qedar

Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 13:59
Fandu Atwebeni ba shilHoha.
When is your Agame god going to release prisoners?
Fed_Up wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 13:19
Asswash [deleted] agameew,

Kewedeku behwala meferagT lemelalaT :lol: :lol:

Awash wrote:
14 Jan 2020, 12:40
fedu aTebaweni shilHoha
Look who else is getting cooked alive. How many more Real Eritreans have died horrible deaths in Agame deqi komarit's gulags?




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