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Deqi-Arawit
Senior Member
Posts: 16033
Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 11:10
Location: Bujumbura Brundi

The con artist is selling Ethiopia. Aye Ethiopia!

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 27 Aug 2023, 17:35

The poor Ethiopia is on autopilot where is the no captain to navigate oceans and seas to make her squeeze of every drop of its potential. Then again, when you have a so called national army which is unable to withstand a renegade militia but flees or wave the white flag instead of fighting or when you have a con artist as a leader who doesn't even have a clue what his job description is, people shouldn't be surprised with the ordeal of modern Ethiopia.

The leeches have committed unbearable and unrepairable damage to Ethiopia and for its prospect to work as a functioning country. The system they have created and implemented is God given gifts for any adversaries to expolit at their will. The behere behere sbotch crap manufactured snowflakes society on every body is engulfed with a sense of victimhood to be an Ethiopian instead of having a sense of pride to be an Ethiopian. And when you have people in leadership position, expect to repeat Woyane 2.0 and this is exact where we are heading.

Today, all of a sudden, the Con artist PM dispatched his diplomats to Cairo Egypt to negotiate about How to fill the renaissance dam, The united Arab emirates is heavy handed in arm twisting, bribing and persuading the con artist to incite the jiggyboo to meet the demand of Egypt and the sneaky Egyptians are not demanding light demands but they demand an agreement which legally binding deal which protect their interest. If Egyptians are going to be involved how to operate renaissance dam in Ethiopia, can Ethiopia claim that it is an independent and sovereign country?


Both Egypt and Sudan have repeatedly sought to bind Ethiopia to an agreement on how it would operate its dam to limit its affect on the neighbouring states, however, Addis Ababa has maintained that recommendations, rather than a binding deal, should suffice. It repeatedly refused to come to the table despite calls from Cairo and Khartoum.

Egypt’s water resources minister Hany Seweilam stressed in a statement on Sunday the importance of “reaching a binding legal agreement on the rules for filling and operating the Renaissance Dam, taking into account the interests and concerns of the three countries, stressing the importance of stopping any unilateral steps in this regard, and that continuing to fill and operate the dam in the absence of an agreement is a violation of the Declaration of Principles”.