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SOUTHERN
AFRICA: Commission to manage Zambezi's water resources
IRIN News
July 14, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42174
KASANE - An eight-country
commission to manage and develop the Zambezi river's water resources was
launched on Tuesday in the town of Kasane, northern Botswana.
The Zambezi Watercourse Commission, comprising Angola, Botswana, Malawi,
Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe will manage one of
the largest watercourse systems in the world, covering a basin area measuring
over a million square kilometres with a total annual flow estimated at
40,750 million cubic metres.
Besides managing the Zambezi's resources, the Commission, consisting of
three organs - a council of ministers, a technical committee and a secretariat
drawn from all eight countries - will advise member countries on planning,
utilisation, protection and conservation issues around the longest river
in Southern Africa. Country representatives will also protect national
interests in actual or potential disputes.
The river flows through western Angola, western and southern Zambia, into
Lake Kariba, and from there across northern Zimbabwe and central Mozambique
into the Indian Ocean.
Observers said the Commission was expected to be in a position to contribute
constructively to the spread of peace, the amelioration and ultimate eradication
of poverty, and integration of the Southern African Development Community
(SADC) region through more efficient and environmentally sustainable use
of the natural resources at the region's disposal.
The commission came into being after the SADC Protocol on Shared Watercourse
Systems was signed in 1995, to enable sustainable use of the region's
water resources.
SADC Executive Secretary Dr Prega Ramsamy said, "In the not so distant
past, in 2000 and 2001, there were devastating floods in this river basin,
which destroyed lives and properties of the people in the various member
states sharing the basin."
He said the Commission was of critical importance "in the context of disaster
prevention as a result of natural extreme occurrences, such as droughts
and floods."
Botswana's President Festus Mogae commented at the launch, "...there will
be a need for a significant shift in mindset on the part of [the Commission's]
council members. Obviously they must represent the interests of their
countries, but council members must also have the capacity to progress
from the role of national representatives to the higher plane of promoters
of regional development".
Developing the Zambezi watercourse holds great potential, not only for
the estimated 31 million people living within the basin, but also for
the total population of the eight member states, currently estimated at
around 103 million people.
Mogae noted that the commission could, by "thinking as one, determine
the best place to grow food, generate power and create other benefits
in the Zambezi watercourse, which can then be distributed throughout the
basin and beyond, through negotiated agreements focused on sharing the
benefits created from sustainable utilisation of the Zambezi waters".
Signing the agreement is expected to bring benefits across all sectors,
including trade, industry, energy production, food security, transport
and communication, tourism, regional security and peace.
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