PROPHECY ALERT: Ethiopia Takes The Nile From Egypt!!
https://youtu.be/VgUGZQm2y60
Fulfilling Isaiah 19:5-6 Ethiopia building a Dam drying up the River Nile
Damning the dam: Egypt opens floodgates against Ethiopia
Wednesday, 12 June 2013
Ethiopia plans to construct a hydroelectric dam on the Nile.
The announcement by Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi this week that “all options are open” to deal with the perceived Ethiopian threat to his country’s water supply raises questions about the Nile Basin and the deep and protracted water war. The opening of the Egyptian damning floodgates in response to Ethiopia’s recent diversion of the Blue Nile course, amid works to construct a hydroelectric dam, was surprising in its intensity and due to the conflicting tones that contrasted sharply with Sudan’s mild response to the Ethiopian action. So why is Egypt hanging Ethiopia out to dry over its Renaissance Dam plans and are the gathering political clouds all about ensuring water security in the land of the Nile Delta?
Without doubt, the Nile has historically played a vital role in the life of Egyptians and has been a top priority and “red line” for Egyptian officials since the days of the Pharaohs. In more recent times, the legal agreements governing the distribution of the Nile waters were all signed between the colonial powers in Africa from 1891 until the Second World War. In 1929, Egypt signed, with Colonial Britain (representing Equatorial countries), an agreement which admits Egypt’s historical rights regarding the Nile and prohibits the building of dams, irrigation projects and other measures on the river, its tributaries or lakes without prior agreement with Egypt. Britain, needing a guaranteed source of cotton for its textile mills in Lancashire and Manchester, gave Egypt the lion’s share in the Nile waters to irrigate its cotton crops. Many countries, including Sudan, Tanzania and Ethiopia, declared that they would not abide by these historical agreements signed under colonial rule and asked to renegotiate their share of the Nile water. This is not surprising given that although Ethiopia contributes 85% of the waters arriving at the Aswan Dam in Egypt and Uganda contributes the remaining 15%, Egypt and Sudan receive 90% of the total share of Nile waters, while the rest of the Nile basin countries receive one tenth of the total water share.
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http://english.alarabiya.net/en/perspective/analysis/2013/06/12/Damning-the-dam-Egypt-opens-floodgates-against-Ethiopia.html