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Thursday, March 6, 2014

READ CAREFULLY: UN Agreement with Somalia





AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED NATIONS AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF SOMALIA CONCERNING THE STATUS OF THE UNITED NATION ASSISTANCE MISSION IN SOMALIA

The UN Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM) signed a detailed legal agreement on 26 February 2014 with the government of Somalia.  It lays down the ground rules under which UNSOM can operate in Somalia.

To read full Agreement doc. click here detailed legal agreement

Somaliland: An African Success Story



Berbera, Somaliland Wikipedia
By 
The Horn of Africa – a region comprising Eritrea, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya and Yemen – has proved one of the world’s most vexing trouble spots for the last 50 years. Cold War rivalries, civil war and tribal conflicts have produced staggering humanitarian suffering and a dangerous breeding ground for terror.

While the world’s attention has focused largely on Somalia as the source for much of this instability, there is a good news story in the Horn of Africa that goes largely unnoticed: Somaliland.
In June 1960, Somaliland gained its independence from Great Britain and was recognized as a sovereign state by 35 nations, including all five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council. Five days later, the government of Somaliland chose to unite with Somalia to create a “Greater Somalia, uniting all the people of ethnic Somali origin.”
But this union was an unqualified failure. The central government in Mogadishu brutally repressed the people of Somaliland, killing 50,000 of its citizens, displacing another 500,000, bombing its cities and laying over 1 million land mines on its territory. In 1991, the people of Somaliland convened a Grand Conference, revoked the Act of Union and declared the independent Republic of Somaliland based on the borders of the former British Protectorate of Somaliland.
Most importantly for the United States, Somaliland has been on the right side of all the important issues. Our government stands four-square with America in the fight against terror. We rigorously enforce the U.N.’s arms embargo against Somalia and readily share threat information. Somaliland has cleared its coastal waters of the scourge of pirates by aggressively apprehending and jailing them. Internally, we have demobilized clan militias and integrated them into unified police and military forces.Since that time, Somaliland has developed into a strong, dynamic democratic state. A formal constitution was approved in 2001 by 97.7 percent of the population in a national referendum that international observers assessed as free and fair. The constitution provides for the separation of powers and ensures the protection of active opposition political parties, a free and pluralistic media and fundamental human rights and civil freedoms. Nationwide local elections took place in 2003 and 2012, and parliamentary elections were held in 2005. Presidential elections convened in 2003 and 2012, and produced peaceful transfers of power.
Economically, Somaliland is a haven of free-market policies and entrepreneurship. With a per capita GDP of $350, Somaliland ranks ahead of Tanzania, Eritrea and Ethiopia. Many government services such as vehicle licensing, are delivered through the private sector. The port of Berbera provides a lucrative transport hub for trade with Ethiopia. Somaliland boasts a highly competitive telecoms industry, offering mobile and landline services that are among the cheapest in Africa. Foreign direct investment is growing. Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) has opened a $17 million production facility to supply soft drink, water and juice products to the region. Canada’s Nubian Resources Ltd. is currently prospecting for minerals -- energy, power and infrastructure projects are also high priorities.
It is time the world recognized Somaliland as a sovereign, independent state. Our region occupies territory where global social, political and economic fault-lines converge. Non-recognition prevents Somaliland from participating fully with international partners to confront these shared challenges. Without the permission of Somalia, navies cannot use our ports to fight piracy. Interpol and foreign governments cannot work with our security services to combat trafficking of people and banned goods. Recognition would significantly enhance our ability to coordinate with international and governmental financial institutions to prevent illicit money flows. International institutions need a sovereign partner to work with to confront serious environmental issues.
International recognition of Somaliland would also send a powerful signal to the rest of Africa and the world. To quote a 2001 report by the Brenthurst Foundation, a Johannesburg-based think-tank, “At a time when ‘ungoverned spaces’ have emerged as a major source of global concern…, it is deeply ironic that the international community should deny itself the opportunity to extend the reach of global governance in a way that would be beneficial both to itself, and to the people of Somaliland.” Far from undermining security, recognition of Somaliland would enhance state capacity and strengthen regional stability.
Until now, Somalia steadfastly refuses even to broach the subject of an independent and sovereign Somaliland. This is unfortunate. We offer a credible example that stable, peaceful, and transparent democracy can succeed in the Horn of Africa. My government is committed to playing a responsible role in international affairs and we will struggle, peacefully, to gain our rightful place on the world stage. We look to the United States, as the paragon of human rights and responsible governance, for support. Formal recognition of Somaliland’s independence not just the right thing to do, it is the smart thing. It would enhance America’s security, promote regional stability and offer a powerful incentive to the rest of Africa that good governance pays.
Mohamed Yonis is Somaliland Minister of Foreign Affairs  
Source: ibtimes.com

Egypt: Diplomatic offensive against Ethiopia




Addis Ababa - Egypt may be in the throes of political turmoil, but the government has begun a diplomatic offensive aimed at stopping Ethiopia from building a huge hydroelectric dam on the Nile River that Cairo says will be a disaster for the Arab world’s most populous nation.

The military-backed administration began its effort to internationalize the thorny issue in hopes of gathering support for its case against Ethiopia, where the Blue Nile rises in the northwestern highlands, after bilateral negotiations deadlocked in January.

“The campaign initiated by Egypt … aims to persuade the international community to reject the dam’s construction because it may lead to further conflict and instability in the region of the Nile Basin,” an Egyptian diplomatic source in Cairo told the Middle East’s al-Monitor website Feb.19.

“More negotiations with Ethiopia only waste time and directly threaten Egypt’s water security,” said the source, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

“We realized that Ethiopia doesn’t want genuine solutions to end the crisis, but is only trying to portray Egypt as approving of the dam’s construction to facilitate access to the funding.

“But Ethiopia hasn’t provided genuine guarantees the dam will not affect Egypt and has shown no intention to amend the technical specifications to minimize the potential risks according to the report by the international experts’ committee, which recommended reconsidering the dam’s safety studies.”

Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said Feb. 13 that Addis Ababa will not back down on the $4.8 billion Grand Renaissance Dam, which will be the largest in Africa.

He observed that since there’s no international court specializing in arbitrating water disputes, Cairo had no choice but to negotiate to reach a settlement acceptable to everyone.

Gamal Bayouni, secretary-general of the Egyptian-European partnership at the Ministry of International Cooperation in Cairo, said Egypt now seeks to “target all countries that provide technical assistance for designing and building the Renaissance Dam through private contractors and also the states likely to fund to construction of the dam.”

On Feb. 6, Egypt’s minister of water resources and irrigation, Mohamed Abdul Muttalib, visited Italy, considered to be Ethiopia’s main technical supporter in building the dam.

Italy’s Salini Construction Corp. is building the 6,000-megawatt facility on the Blue Nile, the main tributary of the Nile that flows northward through nine African states to the Mediterranean.

The Blue Nile accounts for 85 percent of the Nile’s water flow. It joins the White Nile, whose headwaters lie in the East African highlands in Burundi.

Muttalib, who was accompanied by Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy, said after a series of meetings that “the visit has achieved its goal. Italy has understood Egyptian concerns.”

Egyptian sources say Muttalib’s next trip will be to Norway, which is one of the countries funding the dam project.

But it’s not clear at this stage whether Egypt’s diplomatic offensive will be able to secure enough international support to influence Addis Ababa.

The Ethiopians consider the Renaissance Dam and the other dams they plan to build as a symbol of national pride as they will produce electricity that will transform the economic prospects not only for their country but for much of seriously under-developed East Africa as it stands on the cusp of a major oil and gas boom.

For Cairo, maintaining the current flow of Nile water is a matter of national security.

Egypt’s last two presidents, Hosni Mubarak, overthrown Feb. 11, 2011, and Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, ousted by the army July 3, 2013, both made thinly veiled threats to use military force to uphold Egypt’s current access to the waters of the world’s longest river.

The current military regime in Cairo is focused, so far at least, on riding out the domestic political turmoil and restoring stability amid a growing Islamist insurgency.

But it can’t afford to let this issue slide. The Grand Renaissance Dam is to become operational in 2017.

Egypt, with its 84 million people totally dependent in the Nile for water, cites British agreements in 1929 and 1959 that guarantee it the lion’s share of the water and a veto over upstream dam construction.

But Ethiopia, along with Tanzania, Rwanda, Kenya and five other African states with growing populations and mounting demands on agriculture, dismiss these accords as colonial relics

Sources: UPI


Israeli officials believe Obama lacks resolve on Iran


US President Barack Obama meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Sept. 30, 2013. (photo by REUTERS/Jason Reed)

 “The question is whether the West is in decline or just withdrawal,” a high-ranking Israeli security official told me in a closed meeting on March 2, as Russian troops were heading out to Crimea, elevating the crisis in Ukraine to global dimensions. My interlocutor was one of Israel’s top decision-makers. “The whole world is talking about this,” he related.

 “This is being broached at every meeting of foreign ministers or defense ministers and at every forum where issues of global balance of power, world order and global crises are being addressed. And there are many such examples. Look at what’s happening with the Chinese. They deliberately ratchet up tension with Japan, taking control over the South China Sea, behaving as if the United States doesn’t exist. North Korea for a long time has been slighting Washington, doing whatever it wants. In connection with the Syrian crisis, US President Barack Obama let Russian President Vladimir Putin take center stage. An agreement was signed, but now it turns out that its implementation is faltering, yet there’s nobody to talk to. The negotiations with Iran are stymied. They won’t lead to an agreement but will give the West three years of quiet. Meanwhile, Iran cements itself as a nuclear threshold state, continuing to develop cutting-edge centrifuges and ballistic missiles and pursuing weaponization. To me,” the source added, “it seems not a withdrawal but rather a rapid decline.”

Israel is monitoring these developments with concern. “Obama was elected president after two terms by George W. Bush, who turned the use of US force into a kind of a regular occurrence. The United States was entangled in two abortive wars, went broke and grew weary,” said an Israeli defense official. “Obama pledged to fix that. The problem is that he took the country from one extreme to the other. The fact remains that throughout his entire presidency, Obama has not showed once a sign of true resolve; there was not a single event in which he showed that he could and that he was ready and able to use force when there was no other choice. This makes him the weakest American president, as far as we can remember.”

“Even in Libya — the only place where the West intervened in recent years and succeeded in removing a ruling tyrant — Obama kept a low profile, coming up with the concept of ‘leading from behind.’ Well, if you lead from behind you also stay behind,” Israeli officials remark.

Israel’s defense and political establishments believe that the events in Ukraine prove the overall thesis, namely that the world is a jungle. If you show signs of weakness, you end up being eaten up. There is no vacuum. When Putin understands that the West is tired, beleaguered and inert, he acts accordingly. “Unlike Western leaders,” says a high-ranking Israeli defense official, “Putin is determined. He has a goal and he goes after it. He is willing to pay a price and is ready to use force. Once you show readiness, half the job is done.”

A seasoned senior Israeli officer compared the current situation in Europe and the West’s weakness vis-a-vis Iran to when Hamas took over the Gaza Strip in the wake of the elections in the Palestinian Authority in the last decade (2007).

“Even though [former Fatah official] Mohammed Dahlan had security mechanisms in Gaza with ostensibly thousands of trained and armed troops, the Hamas movement easily took control over the Gaza Strip for one simple reason: It had thousands of people ready to die for the cause. The Palestinian Authority did not have people who were ready to fight, sacrifice their lives and be killed for the cause. Thus, what needs to be measured is the degree of resolve. If you are resolved enough and willing to pay the price, you end up winning, sometimes even without a fight,” the officer said.

A high-ranking Israeli defense official applies the above to the Iranian affair. “The sanctions,” he noted, “brought Iran to the verge of collapse. The ayatollahs were brought to their knees. Disgruntlement on the street grew to the point of imperiling the regime. At that point, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei decided to 'drink from the cup of sorrow' — which is the term Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini used upon signing the cease-fire agreement with Iraq — and start negotiations with the West. At the same time, he came to terms with the election of the relative reformist Hassan Rouhani as president. The situation in Iran was almost desperate. Diplomatically isolated, its economy was collapsing. International pressure was brought to bear and unrest was seen in the streets. Unfortunately, however, when the negotiations started, the tables turned. At the outset, this was a negotiation between unequal parties. The Iranians sat at the negotiation table as the party that had to have an agreement, whereas the West needed it but could have done without it while resorting to other options. Then, as noted, it became apparent that everything was turned around. The West behaved as if it had to have an agreement while the Iranians conducted the negotiations as if they could do without it. So that’s why with regard to the issue of resolve, it was all upside down too.”

It is for a reason that Israeli senior officials — from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Defense Minister Moshe (Bogie) Ya’alon and many others — view the conduct vis-a-vis Iran as a “missed historical opportunity” and “regret that it will last for generations to come.”

“Presently, Iran has totally emerged out of its diplomatic isolation,” Israel’s defense establishment asserts. “Foreign Minister [Mohammad] Javad Zarif is doing his victory rounds across the capitals of the Middle East and Europe. Apart from Jerusalem, Cairo and Riyadh, he has been everywhere, even in Amman, Munich and Davos. Although the sanctions have not been officially lifted, the truth of the matter is that they are no longer in effect. The Russians are conducting advanced negotiations with Iran for a large petrol deal, worth billions of dollars a year. The Chinese have long skirted the sanctions. The same goes for Turkish banks. Though showing resolve in the negotiations in Geneva, the French have already dispatched a large delegation of businessmen to Tehran. The Germans hesitated, so the Iranians sent a large delegation of businessmen to Berlin. The Iranian stock market rises. Iran’s citizens have yet to feel the upshot of this, but soon they will. The pressure on the regime has waned.”

“And this happened without Iran having paid a significant price,” Israeli officials note. “Willing to sacrifice the facility in Arak, they were not, however, required to do so. They pursue their research and development. They no longer need 20%-grade enrichment because the quantity and quality of the centrifuges have rendered this unnecessary. Within a matter of weeks they can switch from minimal enrichment to military grade, which is why the red line Netanyahu drew at the UN is less relevant.”

So what’s next? Based on assessments of the defense establishment and conclusions of recent cabinet discussions, the following is Israel’s working premise: We are headed toward three years of “quiet.” The West and Iran will not reach an agreement. The Iranians will neither concede uranium enrichment nor make do with a token number of centrifuges (1,000) nor agree to completely shut down the enrichment installations and the reactor in Arak.

Starting to realize the problem, the West will be unable to sign a “bad deal.” What will happen therefore is that the negotiations will be extended over and over again, lasting for at least the next two years. Israel is talking about the possibility of Washington and Tehran reaching a tacit understanding. Don’t defy us for the next three years — the Americans are telling Iran on the basis of this understanding — so that the president will be able to stand by his word that Iran will not become nuclear “on his watch.”

The problem, Israel says, is that the president’s watch will be over in three years’ time and by then Iran will be at the point where it could break toward a bomb within a matter of weeks while having an arsenal of ballistic missiles that could reach the US mainland — it is developing a missile with a 10,000-kilometer (6,200-mile) range. Pursuing weaponization, Tehran is working on miniaturizing nuclear warheads so that they could be mounted on ballistic missiles.

It is possible, Israeli officials are saying cautiously, that Iran has won. It is important that Obama realizes that even if Iran’s nuclear military capability is materialized a few years after his presidency is over, it could not have happened if he had not given away the store to Iran, for almost nothing, on his "watch."

Lloyds suggests Scotland independence would drive up its costs

Scottish yes vote could have 'material impact' on borrowing, tax and procedures under two regulatory systems, says bank group


By Severin Carrell, Scotland correspondent

Lloyds has set up working groups to investigate the impact if the Scotland vote was in favour of the country's independence. Photograph: Luke Macgregor/Reuters

Lloyds Banking group has issued guarded advice that Scottish independence could have a "material impact" on its costs and borrowing, potentially driving costs up for its businesses and customers.

In its annual report, Lloyds said the impact of a yes vote in September's referendum was uncertain, but that it could have a direct impact on its borrowing costs, tax position and costs of working under two different regulatory systems.

Its cautionary notes are more muted than the explicit statements from RBS and the finance group Standard Life last month concerning their fears of independence having a "significant impact" on their business.

However, it emerged that senior Lloyds executives believe they would have to move their group-registered office from Edinburgh to London under an EU directive which states that insurers and banks must have their head offices and registered offices in the same member state.

Opposition parties in the Scottish parliament claimed that these developments showed a growing number of large employers were worried about the referendum, while Scotland's government insisted that many of the fears would be dealt with if the UK government agreed to a formal currency and banking union.

Iain Gray, Labour's Scottish finance spokesman, said: "The SNP can no longer continue to just put their fingers in their ears and claim that they do not really mean it. To simply dismiss these warnings is to treat the fears of Scottish workers in these companies with contempt."

Last month, the new TSB bank, hived off from Lloyds to increase competition in retail banking, was established with its headquarters in London, despite being founded in Scotland.

The BBC's business editor, Robert Peston, said sources at Lloyds, and City regulators, had disclosed that they were taking legal advice about the 1995 EU directive on insurance, investment and credit providers, which so far remained untested in the courts and had no case law linked to it.

Although only a small number of jobs are tied to Lloyds' registered office in Edinburgh, bank executives believe there is a clear logic to the directive's policy, since Scotland and the UK would be separate states after independence, with Scotland's future status as a new EU member state still unclear.

Lloyds has set up working groups to investigate the possible impacts of independence; these are run by its Scottish executive committee at its small, largely symbolic, registered office at the Mound in Edinburgh, overseen by the banking executive Philip Grant.

Lloyds said its "key mitigating actions" were to investigate "the potential impact on the group's business and impact on customers of a vote in favour of Scottish independence".

Lloyds is taking a more cautious approach than Edinburgh-based RBS, which said last month that a yes vote could "significantly impact the group's credit ratings and could also impact the fiscal, monetary, legal and regulatory landscape to which the group is subject".

It is understood Lloyds would wait until there was a yes vote this September before making more explicit statements about its fears or interests post-independence, given that there would be at least 18 months of negotiations before Scotland became a separate state.

The bank is not expected to follow Standard Life, which is one of Scotland's largest employers but does 90% of its business in the rest of the UK. Standard Life said last week it could move large chunks of its operations to England if independence left it facing greater costs and problems with a currency and finance sector regulation.


Somalia: Interviewing elders from Barawe’s minority Somali clans


Hamza, Interviewing elders from Barawe’s minority clans

Djibouti – Hamza, Interviewing elders from Barawe’s minority clans. Among the elders is a man who lost family members to starvation after Shabelle river, which watered his farm, was blocked for more than a year because he had no money to give to the militiamen.

The elders also told me how the militiamen will go on a raping spree and then come back after nine months to demand ‘their newborn sons.’

They told me the commanders of those militia groups [they gave me more than a dozen names] ran to the capital when al-Shabab took over the town and are now part of the government army and have been rewarded with titles.

Many of the homes in Barawe built during the civil war come with four doors. Reason; “when they [militiamen] enter from one door you run for the other doors.’

It is the story no Somali journalist wants to touch. The men accused of these crimes are all too powerful.

When a friend from Mogadishu heard I went to Barawe and spoke with the elders he told me I was digging my own grave.

Source: geeskaafrika.com

Eritrean President Arrives in Doha, Qatar





Asmara  - President Isaias Afwerki of Eritrea is in his first working visit to the country after His royal highness Shiek Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani becomes the new Emir of Qatar.

On his arrival at Doha International Airport, the President and the accompanying delegation were welcomed by HE the Minister of Municipality and Urban Planning Sheikh Abdurrahman bin Khalifa bin Abdulaziz Al Thani and HE the Eritrean Ambassador to Qatar Ali Ibrahem Ahmad.

The two leaders were expected to discuss the agenda on bilateral relations besides on economic ties, investment and regional development.

At a meeting he conducted at the State House with the Amir of Qatar, Sheikh Temim Bin Hammed Bin Khelifa Al-Thani, the two sides held discussion focusing on bilateral ties, relations of partnership and issues of mutual interest.

President Isaias of Eritrea also met Sheikh Abdalla Bin Nasser Bin Khelifa Al-Thani, Chairman of the Qatari Ministerial Assembly and Minister of Internal Affairs, and exchanged views as regards fostering bilateral relations in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa.

The President would hold similar meetings with various Qatari Officials in the course of his stay in Qatar.

The Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, has ceded power to his son, Sheik Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani eight months ago.

Source: Geeska Afrika

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Scotland's referendum: Salmond says independence will benefit whole UK

Alex Salmond said independence would "rebalance the economic centre of gravity" across the UK



An independent Scotland with a strong economy would benefit the whole of the UK, First Minister Alex Salmond has told a gathering in London.
In his New Statesman lecture the SNP leader said a post-Yes Scotland would help "rebalance the economic centre of gravity" across the UK.
Scotland Office minister David Mundell dismissed Mr Salmond's address.
On 18 September voters will be asked the "yes/no" question: "Should Scotland be an independent country?"
Mr Salmond said he believed that an independent Scotland would be a "powerful economic counterweight to London", and that would benefit the rest of the UK.
He told his audience: "There's a growing realisation that wealth and opportunities are too concentrated, geographically and socially. UK government policies are working for too few, and denying opportunities to too many. Britain is imbalanced.
"We share ties of family and friendship, trade and commerce, history and culture, which have never depended on a parliament here at Westminster” Alex SalmondFirst Minister
"After Scottish independence, the growth of a strong economic power in the north of these islands would benefit everyone - our closest neighbours in the north of England more than anyone.
"There would be a 'Northern Light' to redress the influence of the 'dark star' - rebalancing the economic centre of gravity of these islands."
Mr Salmond renewed his criticism of Chancellor George Osborne for suggesting Scotland would be a "foreign" country if voters backed independence.
He said: "Scotland will not be a foreign country after independence, any more than Ireland, Northern Ireland, England or Wales could ever be foreign countries to Scotland.
"We share ties of family and friendship, trade and commerce, history and culture, which have never depended on a parliament here at Westminster, and will endure and flourish long after independence.
"But the current 'Dambusters' rhetoric has betrayed an attitude as antiquated as it is unacceptable.
"From the myopic perspective of the Westminster elite, Scotland is last among equals."
'Love-bombed'

He also claimed Mr Osborne's recent speech on sterling was "a monumental error".
"No one should be under any illusion that voting for independence means getting independence, which means becoming a new country outside the UK” David MundellScotland Office minister



Last month, Mr Osborne ruled out a formal currency union with an independent Scotland, a position that was backed by Labour and the Liberal Democrats.
The Prime Minister, David Cameron, had previously called on people elsewhere in the UK to urge Scots to vote against independence.
Mr Salmond said: "In the last three weeks people in Scotland have seen an array of approaches from the UK government - what they apparently call their 'Dambusters strategy'.
"We were love-bombed from a distance by David Cameron, then dive-bombed at close range by George Osborne.
"I believe George Osborne's speech on sterling three weeks ago - his 'sermon on the pound' - will come to be seen as a monumental error.
"It encapsulates the diktats from on high which are not the strength of the Westminster elite, but rather their fundamental weakness.
"In contrast, we will seek to engage with the people of England on the case for progressive reform."
'New country'

But Tory MP Mr Mundell said that Mr Salmond was saying that a choice to leave the UK and become independent "means staying exactly the same as we are now".
He added: "By definition, that simply cannot happen.
"No one should be under any illusion that voting for independence means getting independence, which means becoming a new country outside the UK.
"Scotland will also be a foreign country, in law as well as in practice.
"This desperate claim from the first minister suggests he is confused by his own independence policy or he is deliberately trying to confuse others."


Source: bbc

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Scottish Independence taste test for bakery



Cuckoo s Bakery owner Graham Savage with the referendum cupcakes, complete with the appropriate icing. Picture: Scott Taylor

SCOTLAND’S future is the question on everybody’s lips – but thanks to an enterprising city baker and his Yes/No cupcake it could soon be moving towards the nation’s hips too.

Cuckoo’s Bakery, in Dundas Street, has come up with a sweet-sounding opinion poll where customers can fork out £2.50 for a Yes, No or Undecided cake, with the weekly results published on the bakery’s Facebook and Twitter.

The raspberry and white chocolate treats are available to buy from today – 200 days before the referendum on ­September 18.

Owner Graham Savage is keen to ensure no dirty tricks, and staff have been briefed to be on the lookout for supporters from both sides bulk buying cupcakes.

He said: “The most important thing about publising the results is that they are true and accurate. We’re aware that it has the potential to be hijacked so we’ll be keeping a close eye on bulk orders. If someone comes in buying 1000 cakes we’ll know something’s up.

“It’s a bit quirky and a bit of fun, but we wanted to do something to get involved in what is an important political decision for Scotland’s future.

“Hopefully we’ll bring a bit of fun to the debate which has been heating up recently.”

Opened in February 2011, Cuckoo’s concept to launch an alternative opinion poll has brought a smile to even the most wizened of political commentators.

Polling guru Professor John Curtice, of Strathclyde University, said: “It’s a bit of light relief which is much needed. It’s an enterprising way to draw some attention to the bakery but I’ll stick with more traditional polls.”

The latest Ipsos MORI poll shows Yes on 36 per cent, down two points on the company’s previous poll conducted shortly after the unveiling of the independence White Paper last November.

He added: “This latest poll represents disappointing news for the Yes side. An almighty effort is needed from the Yes side over the next 200 days – it needs to buy a lot more ­cupcakes so to speak.”

A Better Together spokesman said Scotland could have its cake and eat it: “We can have our own parliament making decisions and we can have the strength and security of being part of the UK.”


And a Yes Scotland spokesman said: “If the Yes cakes sell more, it’ll be the icing on the cake.”

Globalizing Nile Water Issues



  
Author(s): Helmi Sharawy

Nile Basin countries should realise that water issues in Africa are not only regional or national concerns, but also global concerns, writes Helmi Shaarawy

I appreciate, in principle, the impact of disputes among the countries of the Nile Basin on the spirit of pan-Africanism and on progress in the development of regional cooperation in the Nile Basin, which is essential for the collective future and comprehensive development of one of the important regions in Africa. It is important to bear in mind that the Nile waters question can no longer be regarded as a purely bilateral or even regional issue, as it intersects with — and has become part of — a larger continental and global water agenda, which renders it less subject to the control of any of the Nile Basin countries than to the views of the planning circles in the World Bank, multinational corporations and other global capital sources. These circles, according to many sources (the most important of which is Rushdi Said), have been discussing mammoth dam and hydraulic projects on rivers since the Hague Conference of 2000, in the course of which they established the principle of water pricing and the role of private firms in water marketing projects. They had in mind 15 major international companies (based in the US, Britain, France and Italy) that they anticipated would invest some $800 billion in water projects.

Africa always occupied a prime position in these plans, which extended from the Senegal River to the Congo, Niger and Zambezi rivers. The costs of the Grand Inga Reservoir projects on the Congo, the fourth phase of which is scheduled for completion in 2025 (and which will have the potential to generate 40,000 Megawatts of electricity), are expected to exceed $80 billion. South Africa and Congo have recently signed a crucial treaty on the Grand Inga Hydropower Project that could become the largest hydroelectric project in the world following a meeting of potential investors in the Congo project in April 2008, under the supervision of the World Energy Council, held with the purpose of generating the necessary funding. The World Bank had committed $10 billion as starting capital for the Grand Inga projects, as well as another $8 billion for the nearby Zambezi projects.

Thus, it is clear that the borders of a local project such as Renaissance Dam (with an expected 6,000 Megawatt capacity at a cost of $5 billion) extend beyond Ethiopia. As considerable as the value of this project is in terms of Ethiopian national development, the diversity of contributors to the project, with respect to the creation of the reservoir, power generation and distribution, and infrastructure (including the railways connecting it to other parts of the area) speak of a major multilateral investment process. In my opinion, the Egyptian public should not read this as a conspiracy against Egypt but rather as a network of interests with respect to which it is important to augment the capacity to penetrate this network so as to transform it, together with Sudan and Ethiopia if possible, into a huge engine for collective development along the lines of the multinational Grand Inga Project. (I should add here, that facts and realities put paid to that commotion stirred by a number of Egyptian technicians advocating a project to link the Congo with the Nile via canals that pierce the mountains and the swamps between there and Sudan, all in order to sideline the Renaissance dam!)

Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia are not unaware of the importance of working together in the interests of national and regional development. Moreover, it is in their interests not only to generate joint information resources but also joint positions on the project, as global capital does not operate in accordance with local, regional or pan-Arab biases. Indeed, Arab capital, even with some of its political linkages to Egypt, comes into question in this regard.

We also know that the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI), which for some mysterious reason is being jettisoned, had been earmarked for $122 million from the World Bank for activities involving research, confidence building, communications and promotion programmes preparatory for major 3-6 year project programmes (all this is according to a 50-page booklet on the plans and studies for the initiative).

At the same time, I can add that, according to the available information on major Ethiopian surveys conducted in the area of Renaissance Dam project since 2007, and as Rushdi Said himself, pointed out before he passed away in 2012, Ethiopia — unlike both Egypt and Sudan — never submitted a memorandum on the extent of its water needs, as required under international agreements. This is reminiscent of Addis Ababa’s continued delay in the submission of the studies for the dam to the tripartite technical committee. Moreover, one recalls that the World Bank was not absent while these acts of remiss took place. Since 2001, after the initiative was launched, the World Bank pledged to assist the water ministers of the Nile Basin countries to establish a cooperation consortium (CCON) so as to ensure that it would always be close to the group!

The abundance of information and its simultaneous concealment, in this manner, furnished the arguments and the sources of controversy between the parties concerned in the Nile waters question and crisis. Yet, there is no national agency in any of the Nile Basin countries capable of resolving the matter; nor is there a regional organisation sufficiently strong to assert itself.

However, I anticipate that a new approach will be brought to reading the situation with an eye to “consensus-reaching” either at the regional level, first, or at the level of the sources of global capital, as conflict over such major projects only obstructs progress in the advancement of interests and welfare nationally and regionally. If the financiers in the Congo River basin — as was the case with the Zambezi before this — made it possible for South Africa to lead the investment project outside of its territory and if the DRC (Democratic Republic of the Congo) approved of this so as to become a centre for global investment, I doubt that the Ethiopians would be governed by narrow outlooks when it comes to similar projects with current or future regional or international projects that not only serve developmental interests but also, and perhaps above all, the interests of the international capitalist process.

In light of the foregoing, the globalisation of water projects that encircles the Nile waters crisis leaves little room for “golden solutions”, but it does compel us to exert some effort in a re-examination of the agreements governing the region in accordance with a unified African perspective, to which I am committed.

What most struck me when reading the basic agreements between the Nile Basin states is that they need to be approached more with a political lens than with a legalistic or technical one. This led me to believe that Egyptian and Ethiopian negotiators desire agreement not conflict, and most of the existing agreements for regulating the use of the Nile waters suggest that agreement is possible. The dialogue over the framework agreement for the countries of the Nile Basin is different from the negotiations directly involving the Renaissance Dam. Therefore, it is important to negotiate first over the framework agreement, because it is here we will find the spirit of “consideration for the other” present all along. Indeed, we find this principle already present in the 1959 Nile Waters Agreement, which contains an Egyptian and Sudanese “agreement to discuss together the demands of other countries and to agree on a unified opinion with respect to them”. That provision puts paid to the contention that Khartoum and Cairo had ignored the other parties.

The recent Entebbe Framework Agreement also underscores this principle in its wording regarding “the fair and reasonable use of water resources”, the need to observe the circumstances pertaining to these water resources, including their limited nature, and the commitment not to cause grave harm to other countries.

All such texts and provisions seem to compel towards “dialogue” over principles, rather than mere “negotiations” over details. Once the two countries perceive this they will, of necessity, be propelled towards “agreement” instead of finding themselves forced to bow to the rules and interests of global capitalism and having to negotiate over other vital strategic interests. Such are the anxieties in this respect that one sometimes feels compelled to alert public opinion in both countries of the risk of national interests being subordinated to the interests of global capitalism, by which time conflict and media clamour in Addis Ababa and in Cairo will carry little weight.

Those who are whispering or shouting into the ears of the Nile Basin parties should realise that the circles of global capitalism and all other strategic circles around us must study the interrelated points surrounding the following:

— The statements of Egyptian scientists regarding the subterranean waters in the Western Desert. Most recently, scientist Essam Haggi drew a comparison with water on Mars. Prior to this we have Farouk Al-Baz’s remarks, the most recent of which concerned the rival subterranean river in northern Libya.

— The reports that have been circulating for some time on French water purification projects along the southern Mediterranean coast, starting from Morocco, and Israeli competition in this project, which embraces the whole of the Middle East.

— Previous policies of the World Bank itself, which had advised Turkey and Syria to resolve their crisis over another international waterway through the construction of small dams rather than through conflict.

— The need for more precise discussion of meteorological predictions, as any is sufficient to carry significant argumentative weight, whether in the case of the anticipatable floods surrounding the dams or the prospect of draught afflicting this party or that, not to mention the horrors that await from global warming and the melting of the polar icecaps.

The writer is former director of the Arab and African Research Centre, Cairo. This article is dedicated to Rushdi Said, an Egyptian scientist, professor of geology and expert in irrigation, on the first anniversary of his death.

This article first appeared in Al-Ahram Weekly, Issue No.1184, 13 February, 2014


Source: codesria.org