Monday, July 8, 2013

The Nile for All!

by Eze Eluchie

In the course of a working visit to Uganda, I was opportune to lodge at a relatively luxurious river-side hotel in Jinja, with well maintained flora and which had an exhilarating view of the surrounding plains. 

The tourist that I am, I took off time out of technical discourse on how to rid the African continent of the menace of ‘tobacco smoke’ which had been my primary reason for visiting Uganda, to interact with the locals and appreciate more of their lives and the beautiful environment.

As I strolled towards the bank of the fast flowing water which bordered the southern flank of my hotel, my impromptu tour guide, upon an inquiry, informed me that the river we were approaching was River Nile. I was astounded. Here I was approaching the almighty Nile, and I hadn’t really realized how close I was to living history – that certainly was how I considered the Nile. I was further informed that indeed the source of the Nile was not too far away from my Hotel.

Innocuously, I inquired from my guide how come that their governments did not tap from the waters of the Nile to provide electricity and irrigation for several of the browned-out communities which dotted the area around Jinja. “Oga-man’, replied my guide, calling me by a prefix popularized by Nigerian ‘Nollywood’ movies by which most people in Africa address Nigerian expatriates, ‘our Government has to get approval from Egypt before we can fetch a bucket of water from the river we are now approaching’!

The consternation I felt was palpable.

I have since then deeply acquainted myself with a most partial international instrument of doubtful legality which incredulously denies Eastern African countries from which the Nile originates and traverses, rights to use the waters of the Nile. The so-called ‘Nile Water Agreement of 1929’ entered into by Britain and Egypt (East African countries had no part in this debacle) guarantees that a minimum of two-thirds (66%) of the waters of the Nile would be reserved for Egypt and that Egypt had the right to ‘veto’ any uses Eastern African countries tried to put the waters of the Nile River to.  At first, the contents of the Nile River Agreement appears to be a distasteful joke – until it gradually sinks in that this obnoxious agreement has been implemented for close to a century with disastrous consequences for the peoples residing along the Nile basin in East Africa.

To compound the situation for the Eastern African countries, donor agencies and international financial institutions skillfully ensure the enforcement of the Nile River Agreement by not only not granting facilities geared towards utilization of the Nile River resources by East African countries but also tying multi-lateral agreements to the enforcement of the 1929 Treaty.

What could have motivated such clearly skewed agreements between Britain and Egypt in 1929? Was the lives of the Africans who inhabit East Africa considered less worthy of benefiting from the Nile (and being preserved and protected) than the lives of the Egyptians?

Could access to the waters of the Nile have prevented the Ethiopian Famine of 1983 – 1985 which resulted in the deaths of over 500,000 people? Could access to the waters of the Nile have contributed to the development of the moribund economies of East African countries?

How would the peoples of Europe have reacted if an agreement in the style of The Nile Agreement of 1929 existed with regards to the waters of the Danube River – reserving the bulk of the waters thereof for Romania and Ukraine, from whence the river empties into the sea? or the peoples of West African with regards to the waters of the Niger River – reserving the bulk of the waters for Nigeria?

It is in the light of the foregoing that efforts by Ethiopian authorities to build a hydroelectric dam on the Blue Nile and the Governments of Tanzania and Uganda at asserting their sovereignty and debunking a most ridiculous outdated and untenable agreement entered into between Britain and Egypt deserves support from the rest of humanity.

Egypt should be encouraged to endorse the Nile River Co-operative Framework Agreement which has already been adopted by other source countries of the Nile – Rwanda, Burundi, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and now Ethiopia, and refrain from a confrontational posture and threats of instigation of violence as recently documented its State authorities.

The Nile should be for the benefit of all the peoples along its path.





NB: Video of an unbelievably revealingl Egyptian Cabinet meeting discussing possible clandestine actions against Ethiopia for daring to access the waters of the Nile.


Picture: The Nile River as it snakes through National Park Safari Reserve, Uganda.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Let us learn from Egypt!

by Eze Eluchie


As Morsi is kicked out, let us learn from what is happening today in Egypt 

Our elections are rigged;

Our contraption is defective;

Our Constitution is fraudulent;

Our polity is in dire need of cleansing

Our people are pushed to extremes for survival;

Our politicians are, collectively, stealing the country dry;

Time is fast running out for an orderly restructuring and renegotiation of the Nigerian contraption.

A cosmetic change of guards will not suffice.

Let all those who will raise a whimper for so-called ‘democratically elected’ officials, begin now to advice and urge change, or forever keep silent when the likely, manifests.


Picture: Jubilant Egyptians celebrate the ouster of President Mohammed Morsi


Friday, June 28, 2013

Nigeria's silent, but sure, ethnic cleansing

by Eze Eluchie

The continued silence of the Nigerian State and the civil populace to the continued acts of ethnic cleansing going on in our Middle-Belt region is most unfortunate and regrettable. On a daily basis, scores of our fellow countrymen are killed, hundreds of houses destroyed and thousands are forced to flee their lands and assume the status of ‘internally displaced persons’, and other co-travelers in the Nigerian contraption act with seeming nonchalance, care-free disposition, as if to  confirm the widely held believe that our contraption is comprised of strange bed-fellows.

But for goodness sake, the peoples being killed are also human. Today it is the Birom’s, the Kataf’s, the Afizere’s, the Banda’s, the Chama’s and other relatively numerically smaller tribes which are being attacked. Tomorrow, who will it be? Your tribe or mine?

Nowadays, no day passes without reports of gun-men invading, sacking and killing at will across villages in the Middle-Belt region. Across the region, entire ethnic nationalities have had to abandon their traditional homesteads and relocate to refugee camps in so-called protected territories.

These attacks have become systematic and are clearly targeted at ensuring that the peoples of these regions, who are comprised of ethnic groups which have relatively small numerical strengths, are forcefully removed from their lands.

The culpability of the leadership of the Nigeria Police Force, currently headed  by Inspector General of Police, MD Abubakar, a man who has been adjudged a religious extremist and bigot by a Judicial Panel headed by a respected Supreme Court Justice, in these heinous crimes is further underscored by the unwillingness and refusal of the leadership of the Police Force to take preventive steps to curb or arrest the situation.

The Police authorities rarely make arrests. And in the few instances where the communities attacked are able to identify and arrest their attackers, the authorities’ surreptitiously admit such suspects to administrative bail without prosecution. From bail, the suspects simply disappear into thin air, only to resurface in yet another attack on yet another community.

Increasingly, as happened in the Alakyo massacre of security personnel (see this blog entry of May 22nd 2013: http://ezeluchie.blogspot.com/2013/05/most-unfortunate-murder-of-security.html ), the peoples of these tribes are realizing that the only way they may be able to protect their own lives and preserve the continued existence of their peoples in the face of abandonment by police authorities, may be to resort to self defense.

Rather than seek to address the endless bloodletting and bloodbath bleeding the very life out of the peoples of the contraption, there has been a shameful clamor by often recycled expired politicians to make a grab for the control of the treasury of the State.

Let us talk. Let us restructure and renegotiate our contraption now.





Picture: Mass burial of 66 victims of a recent episode of ethnic cleansing near Jos, Nigeria. Unfortunately, a sitting Senator of the Feedral Republic of Nigeria (Sen Gwang Dantong) and several others were killed during the mass burial pictured here.