Addis Ababa
(AFP) - Last week, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's press secretary took a
break from official statements to post something different to her Twitter feed:
a 37-line poem defending her country's massive dam on the Blue Nile River.
"My
mothers seek respite/From years of abject poverty/Their sons a bright
future/And the right to pursue prosperity," Billene Seyoum wrote in her
poem, entitled "Ethiopia Speaks".
As the
lines indicate, Ethiopia sees the $4.6 billion (four-billion-euro) Grand
Ethiopian Renaissance Dam as crucial for its electrification and development.
But the project,
set to become Africa's largest hydroelectric installation, has sparked an
intensifying row with downstream neighbours Egypt and Sudan, which worry that
it will restrict vital water supplies.
Addis Ababa
plans to start filling next month, despite demands from Cairo and Khartoum for
a deal on the dam's operations to avoid depletion of the Nile.
The African
Union is assuming a leading role in talks to resolve outstanding legal and
technical issues, and the UN Security Council could take up the issue Monday.
With global
attention to the dam on the rise, its defenders are finding creative ways to
show support -- in verse, in Billene's case, through other art forms and, most
commonly, in social media posts demanding the government finish construction.
To some
observers, the dam offers a rare point of unity in an ethnically-diverse
country undergoing a fraught democratic transition and awaiting elections
delayed by the coronavirus pandemic.
Abebe
Yirga, a university lecturer and expert in water management, compared the
effort to finish the dam to Ethiopia's fight against Italian would-be
colonisers in the late 19th century.
"During
that time, Ethiopians irrespective of religion and different backgrounds came
together to fight against the colonial power," he said.
"Now,
in the 21st century, the dam is reuniting Ethiopians who have been politically
and ethnically divided."
![]() |
The Grand
Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (AFP Photo)
|
Hashtag
activism
Ethiopia
broke ground on the dam in 2011 under then-Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who
pitched it as a catalyst for poverty eradication.
Civil
servants contributed one month's salary towards the project that year, and the
government has since issued dam bonds targeting Ethiopians at home and abroad.
Nearly a
decade later, the dam remains a source of hope for a country where more than
half the population of 110 million lives without electricity.
With Meles
dead nearly eight years, perhaps the most prominent face of the project these
days is water minister Seleshi Bekele, a former academic whose publications
include articles with titles like "Estimation of flow in ungauged
catchments by coupling a hydrological model and neural networks: Case
study".
As a
government minister, though, Seleshi has demonstrated an ear for the catchy
soundbite.
At a
January press conference in Addis Ababa, he fielded a question from a
journalist wondering whether countries besides Ethiopia might play a role in
operating the dam.
With an
amused expression on his face, Seleshi looked the journalist dead in the eye
and responded simply, "It's my dam."
In those
five seconds, a hashtag was born.
Coverage of
the exchange went viral, and today a Twitter search for #ItsMyDam turns up
seemingly endless posts hailing the project.
At recent
events officials have even distributed T-shirts bearing the slogan to Ethiopian
journalists, who proudly wear them around town.
![]() |
The dam's
wall is 145 metres (475 feet) high. Filling the lake that will form behind it
will probably take years (AFP Photo/EDUARDO SOTERAS)
|
Banana
boosterism
Some
non-Ethiopians have also gotten in on #ItsMyDam fever.
Anna
Chojnicka spent four years living in Ethiopia working for an organisation
supporting social entrepreneurs, though she recently moved to London.
In March,
holed up with suspected COVID-19, she began using a comb and thread-cutter to
imprint designs on bananas.
Her
#BananaOfTheDay series has included bruises portraying the London skyline,
iconic scenes from Disney movies and the late singer Amy Winehouse.
But by far
the most popular are her bananas related to the dam, the first of which she
posted last week showing water rushing through the concrete colossus.
On Thursday
she posted a banana featuring a woman carrying firewood, noting that once the
dam starts operating "fewer women will need to collect firewood for
fuel".
The image
was quickly picked up by an Ethiopian television station.
"Maybe
the fact that I'm international, and not Ethiopian, but I'm sort of showing
solidarity is meaningful," Chojnicka told AFP when asked why she thought
the dam posts were so well-received.
"It
shows that this is something that's not only seen as valuable by Ethiopians,
but the value is also something that an international person can see."
Political
pressure
Big hydro
projects have in many parts of the world fallen out of favour in the face of
their environmental impact and outsized cost compared with wind and solar.
In
Ethiopia, though, fervour for the GERD has eclipsed such doubts, and stoked
pressure on Abiy to start filling it next month regardless of what happens in
upcoming talks.
Failure to
do so would prompt a backlash that would be "catastrophic for the prime
minister and his government", said Jawar Mohammed, a leading opposition
politician.
Abiy has so
far shown no sign of retreating from the timeline.
In October,
the same month he won the Nobel Peace Prize, he went so far as to assure
lawmakers that "millions" of troops could be mobilised to defend the
dam if necessary.
Billene,
his press secretary, used similarly direct language in her poem extolling the
dam's virtues.
"When
I say 'it's my dam'," she wrote, "I damn well mean it too."



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