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Ethiopia blames Egypt, Sudan as ‘last chance’ Nile dam talks stall
Ethiopia on Tuesday accused Egypt and Sudan of obstructing talks on its contested dam on the Nile, which ended with recriminations and little progress.
It said it would forge ahead with a controversial second filling of the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), a move long opposed by Sudan and Egypt.
The Democratic Republic of Congo's President Felix Tshisekedi, as the current chair of the African Union, hosted the talks in the latest bid to ease decade-long tensions over the waters of the world's longest river.
Ethiopia's construction of the GERD, set to be Africa's largest hydroelectric project, is seen by both downstream countries as a threat to their own water supply.
Ethiopia's foreign ministry, in a statement posted on Twitter, said the meeting failed "due to Egypt and Sudan's rigid stance to make the negotiation and the outcome a tool to affirm their self-claimed water share and foreclose Ethiopia's share."
Ethiopia said talks centred on the role of observers to the mediation -- South Africa, the United States and the European Union.
Read more: Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia's Nile dam dispute - A looming conflict?
Egypt and Sudan want them to have the same role as the AU, which Ethiopia said it does not accept.
"The two countries followed an approach which seeks to undermine the AU-led process," said the statement, adding that Egypt and Sudan had sought to stall and "obstruct the process" by rejecting the draft communique.
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The final text, read by DRC foreign minister Marie Tumba Nzeza, simply noted that the meeting had taken place, listed its participants and thanked Tshisekedi for his work.
Ethiopia said it would continue with the second stage of filling the dam's reservoir as scheduled during the upcoming rainy season. The country announced last July it had met its first year filling target, infuriating Egypt and Sudan.
Sudan's foreign minister, Mariam al-Sadiq al-Mahdi, told reporters Tuesday that Ethiopia "threatens the people of the Nile basin, and Sudan directly".
"We hope that President Tshisekedi's judgement will be able to end... these interminable and insufficient negotiations in which the Ethiopian side places everyone before a fait accompli, in a way that clearly violates international law and the principles of good neighbourliness," she said.
First step?
Ethiopia says power produced by the GERD will be vital to meet the development needs of its 110 million people.
But the two countries downstream fear that their supply of life-giving water will be threatened, with potentially catastrophic consequences.
"We are talking about taking into account all 250 million souls who live in the three countries and their interests," said al-Mahdi.
The head of a team of DRC experts, David Tshishiku, insisted that the Kinshasa talks were simply the beginning of Tshisekedi's efforts to mediate the tricky dispute.
The negotiations were "the first step, on which President Tshisekedi will set out alternatives and working approaches," he told reporters.
Al-Mahdi warned that "without a new programme (for discussions), Ethiopia has an open road to place the people of the region and the entire African continent in danger".
'Unimaginable instability'
The US ambassador in Kinshasa, Mike Hammer, met during the night on Monday for three hours with the delegation chiefs of the three countries in a bid to push matters forward.
Egypt has said the Kinshasa talks are the last chance to reach an agreement, after President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said last week that the region faces "unimaginable instability" over the project.
"Nobody will be permitted to take a single drop of Egypt's water," he said.
Egypt, which depends on the Nile for about 97 percent of its irrigation and drinking water, sees the dam as an existential threat.
Sudan, also downstream, fears its own dams will be compromised if Ethiopia proceeds with filling the GERD before a deal is reached.
Ethiopia said in its statement that it expected the meeting to resume around the third week of April.
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