US suspends aid to Ethiopia over dam dispute

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Washington — The US has decided to cut $100m in aid to Ethiopia amid a dispute with Egypt and Sudan over a dam Ethiopia is building on the Blue Nile, a congressional source told Reuters on Wednesday.

Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt have been locked in a bitter dispute over the filling and operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which remains unresolved although the reservoir behind the dam began filling in July.

“State has decided to cut assistance” due to Ethiopia’s position on GERD negotiations, the source said via e-mail. “Up to $100m or so will be affected, of which $26m is funding that expires at the end of the [financial year],” the e-mail said.

The source said much of the expiring funding deals with regional or border security, political competition and consensus-building, and nutrition. But funding for HIV/Aids, the Food for Peace programme, international disaster assistance, and migration and refugee assistance will be unaffected, the official said.

The Ethiopian foreign ministry was not immediately available for comment.

A US state department official, who did not want to be identified, said the decision to pause certain funding to Ethiopia was triggered by Washington’s concern over Ethiopia’s unilateral decision to start filling the dam before an agreement.

“The US previously and repeatedly expressed its concern that commencing the filling of the GERD before all necessary dam safety measures were implemented created serious risks,” the official said.

Filling the dam while negotiations are under way, the official added, also undermines confidence in the negotiations and is inconsistent with commitments Ethiopia has made to not take unilateral decisions.

The US and Ethiopia have long been close allies, often working in tandem against Somali Islamist insurgents. But US officials have been frustrated by the failure to strike a deal on the dam.

Ethiopia says the dam will generate electricity and help lift its population out of poverty. It will have an installed capacity of 6,450MW — more than doubling Ethiopia’s existing capacity — and is the centrepiece of its bid to become Africa’s biggest power exporter.

However, Egypt relies on the Nile for more than 90% of its fresh water and fears the dams will cause more shortages.

Negotiations have faltered over a demand from Egypt and Sudan that any deal should be legally binding, over how to resolve future disputes, and how to manage the dam during periods of reduced rainfall or ...
3 Sep 2020 1PM English South Africa Business News · News

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