Sudan Willing To Agree ‘Conditional Deal’ On Ethiopia DamSudan's Water Minister, Yasser Abbas

Sudan has revealed that it will only be willing to strike an interim deal with Ethiopia over its controversial Nile dam on conditions including an assurance of further talks in the coming weeks.

This position was made public by Water Minister Yasser Abbas yesterday.

Africa Today News, New York understands that downstream Egypt and Sudan have been pushing upstream Ethiopia to put pen to paper over a binding deal with regards to the filling and operation of its massive dam on the Blue Nile that broke ground in 2011.

Speaking to journalists yesterday in Khartoum, Water Minister Yasser Abbas explained that; ‘Given the time constraints, Sudan will accept an interim agreement based on certain conditions which include signing on all the terms that have been already agreed’.

‘There should also be guarantees that negotiations will continue … and that those talks will be held within a defined timeframe.’

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The minister said the three countries had already ‘reached consensus’ over most technical matters but failed to reach a binding deal.

There had been ‘no development’ in talks since African Union (AU) sponsored negotiations in Kinshasa in April.

Addis Ababa, which said it reached its first target of filling the dam last year, has announced it will proceed in July with or without a deal.

Egypt, which depends on the Nile for about 97 percent of its irrigation and drinking water, sees the dam as an existential threat.

Sudan hopes the project will regulate annual flooding but fears its own dams would be harmed without agreement on its operation.

Dozens of Sudanese protesters gathered outside the Italian embassy in Khartoum on Monday to protest the role of Italian contracting giant Salini Impregilo in the dam’s construction.

Sudan’s relations with Ethiopia have been also been hit by a dispute over the use of the Fashaga farmland near their common border.

 

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK