EGYPTIAN AND SAUDI MEDIA HAVE HARSHLY CRITICISED SUDAN & TURKEY’S AGREEMENT, TENSIONS RISING IN THE RED SEA REGION.
Sudan's official
state news agency said the Sudan & Turkey agreed to set up a strategic
planning group to discuss international affairs, and that they intended to
conclude a military deal.
Tensions in the Red
Sea region have been brewing for months but came to the fore when TurkishPresident Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Sudan last month.
The visit, hailed as
historic, was the first by a Turkish head of state since 1956 when Sudan gained
independence.
Among more than a
dozen agreements signed by Erdogan and Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir was a
deal to temporarily lease the Red Sea island of Suakin to Turkey.
Ankara and Khartoum
said Turkey would rebuild the ruined, sparsely populated Ottoman island to
increase tourism and create a transit point for pilgrims crossing the Red Sea
to Islam's holiest city of Mecca.
'SUAKIN BELONGS TO SUDAN'
Egyptian and Saudi
media have harshly criticised the agreement, and alleged Turkey would build a
military base on Suakin.
Turkey and Egypt, an
ally of Saudi Arabia, have had frosty relations for some time. Ankara strongly
condemned Egypt's military coup in 2013, which overthrew the first
democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Saudi newspaper
al-Okaz ran a headline that read: "Khartoum hands over Suakin to Ankara …
Sudan in Turkish hands."
"Turkey's greed
on the African continent seems to have no limits," the report noted,
referring to Turkey's recent move to set up its biggest overseas military base
in Somalia.
Serdar Cam, head of
the Turkish International Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA), said
Turkey has been introducing projects to establish basic infrastructures African
countries need in every sector.
"The aim of all
these efforts is to prove that [African] countries are indeed able to embark on
sustainable and beneficial development processes when tangible projects are
created that consider real needs regardless of the actual magnitude of the
funding," Cam said.
"Therefore, it
is also Turkey's aim to show the entire world that no country can be eternally
damned to poverty, and to help Africa get rid of its image as the dark
continent."
The Sudanese embassy
in Saudi Arabia responded by saying that "Suakin belongs to Sudan, no one
else", and promising that the deal with Ankara would not harm the security
of Arab countries.
The ripples,
however, were immediately felt across the African continent.
MILITARY REINFORCEMENTS
In what may have
been a response to fears that Turkey was expanding its influence in the region,
Egypt sent hundreds of its troops to a UAE base in Eritrea, on the border with
Sudan.
Khartoum responded
by recalling its ambassador to Cairo, hours after the head of the Sudanese
Border Technical Committee, Abdullah al-Sadiq, accused Egypt of trying to
"drag Sudan into a direct [military] confrontation".
Days later, Sudan
shut its border with Eritrea and deployed thousands of troops there.
The Suakin island
deal with Turkey has merely heightened an already tense political situation in
the region. For months, Sudan and Egypt have exchanged accusations, with Cairo
claiming that Khartoum had been supporting Muslim Brotherhood members and
Khartoum alleging Cairo was supporting Sudanese dissidents.
ETHIOPIAN DAM PROJECT
Also straining
relations between the African nations is the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
(GERD) project, the largest hydroelectric dam project in Africa.
Unhappy with
Khartoum, Egypt last week reportedly proposed to Ethiopia to exclude Sudan from
contentious negotiations over the future of the dam.
Egypt has been at
odds with its neighbours over the $4.8bn megaproject, with Cairo fearing that
its position downstream may affect its access to water from the Nile River
basin, which will feed the dam.
The Egyptian
proposal, sent by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to Ethiopian Prime
Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, suggested that talks proceed with Ethiopia
alone, according to the Addis Fortune newspaper. Egypt was quick to deny the
claims.
On Monday,
Hailemariam received Sudanese army chief Emad al-Din M Adawi and discussed how
to further strengthen their "strategic partnership".
Adawi said the two
neighbours would continue in their collaborative efforts to contain problems in
the region.
ERITREAN-ETHIOPIAN TENSIONS
The deployment of
Egyptian troops to Eritrea has sent longtime foe Ethiopia into a frenzy. Aware
of the poor relations between Egypt and Ethiopia over Nile water use, Eritrea
eagerly welcomed the Egyptian troops.
Ethiopia, which has
the third-largest army on the continent, responded by sending more troops to
the border with its regional rival, Eritrea. Asmara and Addis Ababa have had
two bloody wars over border disputes.
Ethiopia is also
uneasy that the United Arab Emirates, which has cosy relations with Cairo, has
been stepping up its presence in the region. It recently acquired military and
naval bases in countries that have borders with Ethiopia, Somalia to the east
and Eritrea to the north, as well as Yemen. This has led Ethiopia to steam
ahead with construction of the dam, saying that more than 60 percent has
already been completed.
"Construction
has never stopped and will never stop until the project is completed. We are
not concerned with what Egypt thinks. Ethiopia is committed to benefit from its
water resources without causing harm to anyone," Seleshi Bekele,
Ethiopia's minister for irrigation, water and electricity, said in November.
As Egypt, Turkey and
the UAE make efforts to expand their influence and secure allies in the region,
it is unclear whether relations between African states will continue to sour.
Further twists and turns could be ahead as African heads of state prepare to
meet in Addis Ababa later this month for the African Union summit.
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA
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