Entebbe, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | President Yoweri Museveni has said Uganda has not yet ratified the “Nile Agreement” on the use of the River Nile waters, as it is pursuing a maximum consensus on the issue. He said the disagreement between Egypt and other nations on the River Nile is either due to misinformation or not enough discussion.
“The problem of Africa is not water. The problem of Africa is confusion, under-development and ideological disorientation. Instead of quarreling, we should agree on the Nile, develop the population so that we do not waste the water,” Museveni said.
Museveni was speaking at a joint press conference with visiting Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn at State House Entebbe after bilateral talks.
Responding to a question from the press, he said “I have not yet ratified because I want to dialogue. To get a consensus, it is better we have more dialogue, more talking. If you preserve backwardness in Uganda, how does that help the Nile?”.
The most recent conflict arose after Ethiopia planned to build dams for electricity that Egypt felt would be a threat on water supply to their country.
The Nile is the world’s longest river flowing 6,700 kilometers through ten countries in northeastern Africa — Rwanda, Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan and Egypt.
Electricity will save the River Nile
Museveni said the Nile action plan should actually include electrification of the Nile Basin region, as lack of power is actually the biggest danger to the river.
“Lack of electricity in the tropics is the biggest danger. When people do not have electricity, they cut trees for firewood. When they cut trees, the environment is damaged, which affects water flow,” Museveni said.
Museveni said the lack of industrialization, forces many people to remain in agriculture and invade the swamps.
“The second danger to the Nile is backwardness. If you have got backward societies, the Nile will be in trouble. Without industrialization, the people will engage in primitive agriculture, and primitive agriculture means you go into the forest and invade the wetlands.”
He said up to 40% of Uganda’s rain, most of which then flows to the Nile, comes from the wetlands.
Prime Minister Desalegn, who is accompanied on a 3-day state visit by his wife, Roman Tesfaye Abney arrived in the country earlier today and was this afternoon received at State House, Entebbe by his host Museveni and his wife, Janet Museveni.
“I thank the PM for accepting my invitation. He has come on the anniversary of the Battle of Adwa, where King Menelik defeated the Italians on the 2nd of March 1896. I congratulate the people of Ethiopia on this occasion,” Museveni said.
2nd March 1896: Ethiopia defeats Italy at Battle of Adowa under Menelik II. It served notice that Africa was not just there “for the taking” pic.twitter.com/4ARbt2itMz
— AFRICAN HISTORY (@africanarchives) March 2, 2017
The bilateral talks that followed centered on several regional issues including use of the River Nile waters under the auspices of the Nile Basin Summit.
On South Sudan, the two countries agreed on ways for continued stabilization in Juba, using the IGAD, which is currently chaired by Prime Minister Desalegn.
The two countries agreed to continue working together to create an enabling environment for Somalia to build state pillars, establish minimum infrastructure and social services.They also agreed to strengthen cooperation on defence matters.
On trade, they agreed to explore areas in which the two countries can trade with each other especially now that there is a route (road) connecting Kenya and Ethiopia at Moyale – which they can take advantage of.
We shall hold bilateral talks with the Ethiopian delegation as we seek to strengthen economic & political r/ship between our countries. pic.twitter.com/nlCGIPzifD
— Yoweri K Museveni (@KagutaMuseveni) March 2, 2017
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editor@independent.co.ug
To the Independent’s Article on “EXPOSED Secret GMO Research”, I wish to state that while the author and his likes at ACODE think GM-crops is the things to fear and fight, what about brain or heart surgery that Uganda is practising/offers patients of the same?
http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Sigh-of-relief-as-Mulago-starts-heart-surgeries/688334-2051722-jv3981z/index.html
It looks like your fear is against advances in agriculture or plants/crops, but not in health, as if plants/crops are pre-destined for doom. As if plants/crops are meant to be untouched, even when they’re under virulent attack by viruses, fungi or bacteria!
Don’t be the selfish creatures, who think about themselves and not about what happens to other creations around them, like plants/crops! Always remember that they also need treatment when under attack! You humans shiver all over just under malaria or flu attack! What about bananas currently being ravaged by the fire-like scorchy BBW, the streaky and rot-causing CBSD in cassava? What about the CMD also ravaging to cassava? No, stop your unguided and unfounded — but ideologically-driven arguments against GM-crops. Let’s get real.