منتديات سودانيزاونلاين    مكتبة الفساد    ابحث    اخبار و بيانات    مواضيع توثيقية    منبر الشعبية    اراء حرة و مقالات   
News and Press Releases    اتصل بنا    Articles and Views    English Forum    ناس الزقازيق   

Home Search

Board Laws

Articles

Refresh

المنبر العام
Sudanese Videos

Archives

News in English

News in Arabic

Welcome Guest [Login]
Your last visit: 05-03-2024, 11:38 PM Home

Articles and ViewsEGYPT’S PLANELOAD OF KALASHNIKOVS TO FAN ETHIOPIAS SEDITION By: Saeed M. Adnan
Printable Version   Forward   Threaded View « Previous Topic | Next Topic »
Jump to newest reply in thread »

EGYPT’S PLANELOAD OF KALASHNIKOVS TO FAN ETHIOPIAS SEDITION By: Saeed M. Adnan

07-14-2020, 02:04 AM
سعيد محمد عدنان
<aسعيد محمد عدنان
Registered: 02-28-2014
Total Posts: 226





EGYPT’S PLANELOAD OF KALASHNIKOVS TO FAN ETHIOPIAS SEDITION By: Saeed M. Adnan

    02:04 AM July, 13 2020

    Sudanese Online
    سعيد محمد عدنان-UK
    My Library
    Short URL

    London – U.K.
    Here you can vision how a sedition is lit in the Oromia community in Ethiopia. The very first Oromo prime minister ever, Abiy Ahmed, earned the Nobel Peace Prize in bringing peace with Eretria, successfully handling the December Revolution travail in Sudan and proudly achieving the completion of the Renascence Dam, which is a huge uplift for the Ethiopian poor community, to a modern society stature from the affluence promised by the Dam. The Oromo community are bewilderingly split in a sedition of no sense. News have it that a foreign government is fanning its fire to distract the Prime Minister off the grip on the complex administration of the Dam at the crucial time of its inauguration……
    Here it is:
    The Telegraph
    Planeload of Kalashnikovs sends warning to world over Ethiopia's massive new dam
    Regional superpowers Ethiopia and Egypt in row over new power to turn off water supply to Cairo
    By: Will Brown: AFRICA CORRESPONDENT and:
    Amanda Sperber
    NAIROBI
    4 July 2020 • 4:00pm
    The plane from Egypt packed with a cache of weapons was meant to arrive in Somalia in May.
    But the two thousand Kalashnikovs, rocket launchers, sniper rifles, pistols and mortars never touched down.
    They were stopped, a senior Somali official told The Sunday Telegraph, because of fears in Mogadishu of Somalia being publicly drawn into a growing row between two of Africa’s superpowers.
    Egypt has been the dominant power on the Nile for thousands of years. But the balance of power is about to shift far upstream.
    In the next few weeks, when the rainy season arrives, Ethiopia will start to fill up a vast reservoir with the waters of the Blue Nile, one of the great river’s two main tributaries. One of Africa's largest infrastructure projects will effectively give Ethiopia the power to turn off the taps in Egypt - and could force neighbouring countries to pick a side.
    For nearly a decade, Ethiopia has been constructing a one-mile-long wall of cement almost twice the height of the Statue of Liberty. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, as it is known, straddles the Blue Nile, only a few miles from the border with Sudan.
    The mega project is almost complete. It will be the largest hydroelectric dam in Africa, capable of holding 72-billion cubic metres of water and doubling the country’s unstable energy supply.
    For Ethiopia, the dam is a national wonder — a statement of a people treated cruelly for the last century emerging onto the world stage, and a stepping stone towards industrialisation.
    The £3.8bn needed for the project has been raised without international help through private donations and government bonds. Ethiopian civil servants have even been asked to pay part of their salary towards the construction.
    But for Egypt, whose 100 million people live almost entirely off the freshwater from the river, the dam poses an “existential threat” according to Egypt’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sameh Shoukry.
    Egyptian officials say that even a small reduction in the Nile’s waters could worsen already bad droughts and wreak on the country’s rich agriculture sector and water supply.
    Sudan, the other downstream country, stands to benefit from the cheap electricity and the flood control the dam will provide.
    Talks between the three countries over how the dam should be filled and managed have failed to resolve these fundamental differences.
    In February, a US-backed round of talks ended with Ethiopia walking out at the crucial moment. The talks came close to reaching a deal but broke down over detailed legal issues of drought management and international treaties. Ethiopia felt these would damage its sovereignty.
    Now Ethiopia is planning to fill it with or without an agreement. In recent weeks, this has prompted analysts and diplomats to issue unprecedented warnings that a peaceful resolution must be found immediately.
    Their concerns are well-founded. In the past, Egyptian officials have made thinly veiled threats of military action, saying that Egypt would use “all means available” to protect its water security. Powerful actors close to the government have gone further, saying the Egyptian people will call for war if Ethiopia tries to starve the country.
    The Ethiopian Prime Minister and Nobel Peace Prize winner Abiy Ahmed has responded in kind. Last year he said that “No force can stop Ethiopia from building the dam” and that the country would marshal ‘millions’ of men to defend it.
    Somalia has its own complex security issues. A suicide car bomber drove into a checkpoint outside the port in Mogadishu on Friday
    Somalia has its own complex security issues. A suicide car bomber drove into a checkpoint outside the port in Mogadishu on Friday
    Despite the rhetoric, the chances of outright war between Egypt and Ethiopia are slim. With some 1,000 miles of Sudanese desert separating the two powers, Ethiopia looks invulnerable to land attacks.
    Airstrikes on the dam are a more feasible military option for Egypt. However, this would have devastating effects on regional security and would win Cairo few long-term benefits.
    “If Egypt launched strikes against the dam, what long term advantage would it gain؟ Even if that strike was highly destructive, Ethiopia would just start building another dam on the Blue Nile. Then in ten years, Egypt would face the same problem but this time it would not be consulted at all,” says William Davidson, Senior Analyst at the International Crisis Group, an NGO based in Brussels.
    Ethiopia's Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew declared that his country will go ahead and start filling the $4.6 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
    Ethiopia's Foreign Minister declared that his country will go ahead and start filling the $4.6 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
    A new round of African Union mediated talks is currently underway. Last week, Egypt’s foreign minister warned that if the United Nations failed to intervene in the dispute, there was a risk of conflict.
    “The latest talks represent the culmination of months of brinkmanship,” said Adam Taylor from the Africa-focused risk consultancy, Sofala Partners.
    “But it still seems difficult to imagine how either Egypt or Ethiopia could publicly cede ground without losing face.”
    It is unclear who will back down first. If no deal is found, tensions in the fragile region will continue to rise with the waters.
    The plane load of weapons, detailed in several documents leaked to the Sunday Telegraph, will stay in Egypt - for now.

    For an Arabic version of this essay:
    شحنة الكلاشنكوف الجوية المصرية لاشعال الفتنة الإثيوبي
    please click on the link below:
    https://sudaneseonline.com/board/505/msg/1594685213.html
                  

Arabic Forum

Title Author Date
EGYPT’S PLANELOAD OF KALASHNIKOVS TO FAN ETHIOPIAS SEDITION By: Saeed M. Adnan سعيد محمد عدنان07-14-20, 02:04 AM

[Post A Reply] Page 1 of 1:   <<  1  >>

Comments of SudaneseOnline.com readers on that topic:

EGYPT’S PLANELOAD OF KALASHNIKOVS TO FAN ETHIOPIAS SEDITION By: Saeed M. Adnan
at FaceBook
Report any abusive and or inappropriate material



Articles and Views
اراء حرة و مقالات
News and Press Releases
اخبار و بيانات
اخر المواضيع فى المنبر العام
Latest Posts in English Forum



فيس بوك جوجل بلس تويتر انستقرام يوتيوب بنتيريست Google News
الرسائل والمقالات و الآراء المنشورة في المنتدى بأسماء أصحابها أو بأسماء مستعارة لا تمثل بالضرورة الرأي الرسمي لصاحب الموقع أو سودانيز اون لاين بل تمثل وجهة نظر كاتبها
لا يمكنك نقل أو اقتباس اى مواد أعلامية من هذا الموقع الا بعد الحصول على اذن من الادارة
About Us
Contact Us
About Sudanese Online
اخبار و بيانات
اراء حرة و مقالات
صور سودانيزاونلاين
فيديوهات سودانيزاونلاين
ويكيبيديا سودانيز اون لاين
منتديات سودانيزاونلاين
News and Press Releases
Articles and Views
SudaneseOnline Images
Sudanese Online Videos
Sudanese Online Wikipedia
Sudanese Online Forums
If you're looking to submit News,Video,a Press Release or or Article please feel free to send it to [email protected]

© 2014 SudaneseOnline.com


Software Version 1.3.0 © 2N-com.de