{"id":25635,"date":"2021-06-02T11:00:44","date_gmt":"2021-06-02T11:00:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/synerjies.com\/?p=25635"},"modified":"2021-06-02T11:13:19","modified_gmt":"2021-06-02T11:13:19","slug":"egypt-ethiopia-the-nile-scrimmage","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/synerjies.com\/2021\/06\/02\/egypt-ethiopia-the-nile-scrimmage\/","title":{"rendered":"Egypt \u2013 Ethiopia: The Nile Scrimmage"},"content":{"rendered":"

Last month, the special US envoy to the Horn of Africa Jeffery Feltman commenced on an African Tour that includes Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Sudan. The tour comes as an effort by the Biden Administration to address the complex crises in the Horn of Africa and on top of the list comes The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) issue. The tour commenced as Mr. Feltman arrived in Egypt to hold talks with the Egyptian officials as the tension has been escalating between both Egypt and Sudan on one hand and Ethiopia on the other over the past month. The tension roots from the inability to reach a legally binding agreement overfilling and operation of the dam between the downstream Countries, Egypt and Sudan, and the upstream country, Ethiopia. The Ethiopian government previously announced that the Second filling of the GERD reservoir will start in July this year. The first filling of the dam reservoir took place in July 2020 after a unilateral unannounced decision from Ethiopia. The dam is currently withholding 4.9 billion cubic meters of water and is expected to increase to a total of 18 billion cubic meters after the second filling.<\/p>\n

To fully understand the current situation, we have to look back on how did we reach it in the first place. The Egyptian-Ethiopian relations date back to ancient Egypt as there were many religious, political, and cultural relations between the two countries and some of these relations continued over different times. Both countries share one of the oldest diplomatic relations between them that date back to the 1930s. For many years, The Church of Alexandria in Egypt and the Ethiopian church were an example of the strong ties between the two nations as the Ethiopian church derived its orthodox faith and culture from the Egyptian church since its construction in the 4th<\/sup> century till its independence in 1958.<\/p>\n

Nevertheless, the Nile River has always been at the core of the relations between the countries. The Nile River is the longest river in the world which starts just south of the equator and runs for more than 6,000 Kms through 11 countries till it reaches the Mediterranean Sea in Egypt. The Nile is formed by three principal streams; the Blue Nile and the Atbara that flow from the highlands of Ethiopia, and the White Nile which starts at Lake Victoria in Tanzania and flows north until it reaches Sudan, where it converges with the Blue Nile. Egypt and Sudan\u2019s main inflows come from the Blue Nile and throughout the years, there have been many efforts to coordinate the Nile water usage and distribution of portions between the three countries. There were mainly three main treaties:<\/p>\n