Friday, 30 May, 2003, 16:40 GMT 17:40 UK
Analysis:
Middle East water wars
By Adel Darwish
Writer and commentator on the Middle East
After signing
the 1979 peace treaty with Israel, Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat said his nation will never go to war again, except to protect its water resources.
King Hussein of Jordan
identified water as the only reason that might lead him to war with the Jewish state.
Former United Nations Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali warned bluntly that
the next war in the area will be over water.
From Turkey to Uganda, and from Morocco to Oman, nations with some of the highest
birth-rates in the world are all concerned about how to find enough water to sustain urban growth and to meet the needs of
agriculture, the main cause of depleting water resources in the region.
All of these countries depend on either the three great river systems which have
an average renewal rate of between 18 days to three months, or on vast underground aquifers some of which could take centuries
to refill.
The Nile, the world's longest river, is shared between nine countries whose population
is likely to double within two decades; yet the volume of water the Nile provides today is no larger than it was when Moses
was found in the bulrushes.
The list of 'water-scarce' countries in the region grew steadily from three in 1955
to eight in 1990 with another seven expected to be added within 20 years, including three Nile nations.
The Hidden Factor
International law is inadequate in defining and regulating the use of shared water
resources. Few agreements have been reached about how water should be shared.
Middle Eastern nations have resorted to force over issues less serious than water.
Since the Madrid conference in 1991, Palestine-Israel
negotiations and the now frozen negotiations with Syria
have always stumbled over the issue of sharing water.
With the Israeli army in control prohibiting Palestinians from pumping water, and
settlers using much more advanced pumping equipment, Palestinians complain of "daily theft" of as much as 80% of their underground
water.
During the research for the book: Water Wars both my co-author and I, discovered
that water was the hidden agenda for past conflicts and one major obstacle to reach a lasting and final settlement in the
region.
Ariel Sharon went on record saying that the Six Day War started because Syrian engineers
were working on diverting part of the water flow away from Israel.
"People generally regard 5 June 1967 as the day the Six-day war began,'' he said.
"That is
the official date. But, in reality, it started two-and-a-half years earlier, on the day Israel
decided to act against the diversion of the Jordan.''