Egypt’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Sameh Shoukry and Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Ati during their talks with their Sudanese counterparts in Khartoum on Wednesday (Photos courtesy of Egyptian foreign ministry)
Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry and Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Ati arrived in the Sudanese capital on Wednesday for consultations with Khartoum officials on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD).
Shourky and Abdel-Ati were received at the airport by their respective counterparts Mariam Al-Saddiq Al-Mahdi and Yasser Abbas, a foreign ministry statement read.
The Egyptian and Sudanese ministers tackled bilateral relations and subjects of mutual interest, prime among which was the GERD dispute, an earlier statement by the foreign ministry said.
Egypt and Sudan have been negotiating for almost a decade now with Ethiopia to reach a legally binding and comprehensive deal on the GERD’s construction, which Addis Ababa started on the Blue Nile in 2011.
The latest talks of the $4.8 billion Ethiopian hydropower project — which was sponsored by the African Union (AU) and aimed to revive the already stalled negotiations since January — was held in the AU’s chair country, the DR Congo, in April but failed to stir the stagnant water, with both Egypt and Sudan blaming Ethiopia’s “intransigence.”
Meanwhile, Ethiopia intends to commence its second filling of the GERD on 22 July with or without forging a deal, a unilateral move that has been rejected by both downstream countries, describing it to be “a clear violation of international law” and “threatens regional security and peace.”
On Monday, Sudan’s Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdouk said his country will “use all the legal means” if Ethiopia goes ahead with the second filling without reaching a binding deal, a step Khartoum views as a direct threat to its interests.
Two days earlier, Abdel-Ati affirmed that any action taken without reaching a fair and legally binding agreement and without coordination with the downstream countries would be “a unilateral act that is rejected”.
On the same day, Sudan’s Foreign Minister Mariam Al-Saddiq Al-Mahdi stressed that Ethiopia’s intransigence on the GERD file may drag the region into “ominous slides”.
Wednesday’s statement added that Egypt’s two ministers are scheduled to meet with Lieutenant General Abdel-Fattah Al-Burhan, the head of Sudan’s transitional sovereign council, and Hamdouk .
In addition, both will hold a session of talks with Sudan’s ministers of foreign affairs and irrigation at the foreign ministry’s headquarters in Khartoum, the statement said.
The visit, the Egyptian foreign ministry said, comes as part of the ongoing efforts to strengthen the strategic relations that unite the two brotherly countries.
Sudan's Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Irrigation Mariam Al-Saddiq Al-Mahdi, and Yasser Abbas receiving Shoukry and Abdel-Ati upon their arrival in Khartoum on Wednesday
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