The Nile River as seen from its source. Picture: Bakidzanani Dube |
On our way back to our point of entry, I
asked Joel our tour guide a lot of questions about the Nile River. You may
wonder why I was so curious about this river, out of all the things I had
enjoyed or seen in this country. Well, that should be simple. The Nile is the
longest river in the world and also the river where Moses who later on led the
Israelites out of Egypt was hidden by his sister Miriam when Pharaoh had
decided that all the male children in contemporary Egypt be killed. Therefore,
it undoubtedly marks the origins of Christianity in a way. I am also a
Christian myself. Thus by visiting where the Nile starts I was simply visiting
a great landmark indeed.
Secondly, the Nile is undoubtedly the
reasons why earliest civilisations like Egypt and Kush existed in the first
place, and equally the reason why present day Egypt continues to flourish!
Those civilisations are a heritage to
Africa, together with Great Zimbabwe back home and as a historian my curiosity
was not unfounded because I always want to know more about such things.
Now, being 4 115 miles long, the Nile
River is the longest river in the world! This length is equivalent to 6 853km,
and this is 353km more than the Amazon which is the second longest river in the
world. In fact, to make you understand why the Nile is so unique let me provide
you a table below which compares the attributes of the top ten longest rivers in the world.
River
|
Length
in miles
|
Length
in km
|
Countries
where it’s found
|
Continent
|
Nile
|
4 132 miles
|
6 853km
|
Ethiopia, Uganda, Burundi, Kenya,
Eritriea, Rwanda, Tanzania, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, Sudan,
Egypt
|
Africa
|
Amazon
|
3 976 miles
|
6 400km
|
Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia,
Ecuador, Venezuela, Guyana.
|
South America
|
Yangtze
|
3 917 miles
|
6 300km
|
China
|
Asia
|
Mississippi
|
3 902 miles
|
6 275km
|
1,5% in Canada, 98,5% in U.S.A
|
North America
|
Yenisei - Angara
|
3 445 miles
|
5 539km
|
97% Russia, 3% Mongolia
|
Asia
|
Yellow River
(Hwang-he)
|
3 395 miles
|
5 464km
|
China
|
Asia
|
Ob-Irtysh
|
3 364 miles
|
5 410km
|
Russia, Kazakhstan, China and Mongolia
|
Asia
|
Parana
|
3 030 miles
|
4 880km
|
Brazil, Agentina, Paraguay, Bolivia
and Uruguay
|
South America
|
Congo
|
2 922 miles
|
4 700km
|
DRC
|
Africa
|
Armur-Argun
|
2 763 miles
|
4 444km
|
Far East Russia and North Eastern
China
|
Asia
|
As stated by Joel and supported by my
research findings, the Nile is the only river amongst the top ten biggest that
flows north consistently, and is the only river in the world that supplies
eleven countries! It is also the only exogenous river in the world whose source
is lakes. Observe that the source of the White Nile which I visited in Uganda
is Lake Victoria which is the biggest lake in Africa and the fourth largest in
the world after the Caspian Sea, Lake Michgan-Huron and Lake Superior in
America. The source of the Blue Nile, commonly known as the Azure Nile in
Ethiopia is Lake Tana in that country. Therefore, it can be observable that the
sources of the two main tributaries of the Nile River are lakes.
Funny enough, during my research on the
Nile River I discovered that instead of the White Nile, being the longest of
the tributaries and originating from Lake Victoria the biggest lake supplying
most of the water, it actually supplies only 15% of the water and the other 85%
is supplied by the Blue Nile which originates from a smaller lake, awkward!
From follow-up enquiries and independent
research, the reason for this is that the White Nile has most of its water is
diverted through waterways into agriculture and other uses along the way. Thus,
not all of its waters reach the Khartoum in Sudan, where the White and the Blue
Nile meet.
Like any other natural landform in the
world, the Nile River is a source of debate and controversy for many
researchers, who at least want to wrench away debates from one another.
Of one of the interesting arguments that
I stumbled upon is the ongoing debate between explorers, geographers and
environmental researchers alike concerning the source of the river. One school
of thought has it that the White Nile does not actually start in Uganda. They
claim it actually starts in Burundi.
Now, in Burundi there is a river called
the Kigera River which drains into Lake Victoria. It is from the source of this
Kigera River that some researchers started measuring the Nile. Thus adding the
stretch from the source of the Kigera River to where the White Nile separates
with Lake Victoria in Jinja, the point marked in my previous blog, that
additional stretch can make the Nile to clock more than 7 000km in length, a
record that surpasses that of any other known river in this world!
If so, Lake Victoria would immediately
cease to be the source of the White Nile but become one of the water bodies
along its course, just like Lake Albert, Lake Kyoga and others.
However, these suggestions have been
dismissed by the second school of thought which treats the Kigera as one of the
distant tributaries of the Nile, not to be necessarily confused with the source
of the river which officially remains the one marked at Jinja, which gives it its
currently agreed length.
The same debate about length has also
affected the Amazon, the world’s second longest river and albeit the biggest,
especially now that it contains 20% of the world’s fresh water. Infact, because
of this confusion some accounts actually state that the Amazon is the longest
river in the world and the Nile second longest.
The Nile gets its name from a Greek word
“neilos”, which means river.
While the river supplies more than
eleven countries in East and North Africa, the country which entirely depends
on this river more than the rest for its source of livelihood is Egypt. Since
the times of Ancient Egypt and Kush, the Egyptians have been benefiting food,
transport and other materials from this river.
The Ancient Egyptians actually had their
god, Hapi who they said was the god of the Nile and they appeased him
requesting for the floods which always left behind fertile alluvial soils good
for farming.
According to Joel and from my own
independent observations, in Uganda, except that the Nile, the longest river in
the world starts here, it is not as important as it is in Egypt or Sudan.
Uganda is not desperately dependent on this river.
Even if you could pull out the Nile or
bar Ugandans from using it, that will not matter because they have more water
sources than you can imagine. Actually, the bulk of the lakes in The East
Africa Great Lakes Region are concentrated in Uganda, plus many more rivers!
In fact, there are some people in Uganda
who have never set foot or eyes on the Nile, yet their lives continue to
flourish. Therefore, it is just one of the rivers in the country, just like
Sezibwa, Bwanda amongst others.
Prior to 1962, the Nile used to flood
between June and September, leaving behind black sediments which made the
Egyptians to call the river “Aur”, which means black, taking it especially from
the colour of the fertile alluvial soils left behind by the floods.
As a result, most Egyptians settled near
the Nile as it was a source of food and transportation. But settling near the
Nile always caused gross loss of life because many homes were always swept away
by floods.
However, these floods began to recede
following the completion of the High Aswan Dam that was built in the 1960s.
Today the Nile actually has actually more dams on it namely the Roseires Dam, Sennar Dam and Owen Falls Dam.
Added to the dams, the Nile is dotted
with many large cities like Jinja, Juba, Khartoum, Thebes/Luxor, Gondokoro,
Karnak, Aswan, Cairo and Alexandria. A large number of these cities are in
Egypt as the river influences their sprouting.
The Nile is home to a variety of wildlife |
Moving on, my research made me discover
that the Nile hosts a large number of wildlife. The river is home to the
biggest crocodile species in Africa and the world. Added to that it hosts
hippos, frogs, Nile monitors, turtles, tortoises, wildebeest mongooses, baboons
and more than 200 species of birds.
Baboons are observable on the Karuma Bridge on the Gulu Highway in Uganda, just a few meters west of the Karuma
Falls. I saw these on a different day as I was exploring the Nile River on my
way to Gulu.
Karuma Bridge, along the Gulu-Kampala highway |
Joel told me that crocodiles and hippos
live side by side where the waters are murky. Thus between our point of entry
on Lake Victoria and the Source of the Nile, a stretch of 2.5km there were no
crocodiles or hippos because the waters were not murky.
Another phenomenon I discovered about
the Nile is that it is full of beautiful waterfalls and gorges.
Of the phenomenal waterfalls are the
Murchison Falls also known as the Kabalega Falls found in Western Uganda where
the White Nile after Lake Kyoga is just 7 metres wide and the water tumbles
down 43metres deep before flowing into Lake Albert. This is the narrowest point
ever of the big river but not the deepest.
The most breath taking feature of these
falls is the devil’s cauldron, which is a plunge pool at the base of the falls.
The devil’s cauldron is an equivalent of the devil’s pool back home in
Zimbabwe, on the Victoria Falls, observable from the Zambian Side.
Karuma Falls as seen from Karuma bridge |
The other, much shallower falls are the
Karuma Falls, just a few metres east of Karuma Bridge along the Gulu-Kampala
Highway in Northern Uganda, 311 km from Kampala.
I discovered that there is a lot of
politics around the Nile River.
The second biggest and possibly the most
dangerous dispute surround the question of who owns the Nile.
“Egypt claims to own the Nile but that
is an arrangement which was left by the British during the colonial era,” said
one Ugandan.
“If so, how can it claim a river that
starts in our country? Recently, our president suggested a 11 country
conference concerning the dispute over the ownership of the Nile but Egypt did
not attend and so it just ended like that,” he continued.
Looking at such statements, it shows
that the Nile River is a disputed resource indeed.
According to the writings of Fred
Pearce, a U.K based freelance journalist, “It would be expensive, and a major concession
for Egypt to allow the main faucet on the river to move to another country —
particularly its regional rival, Ethiopia”.
There seems to be indeed a dispute over
the ownership of the Nile.
Looking at the arguments that I raised
earlier on concerning the contributions of The Blue and The White Nile, this
may be explaining why the White Nile which is the longest and supposed to be
contributing more water since it is coming from the biggest lake in Africa, is
contributing only 15% of the water after most of it has been diverted before
the Khartoum where it meets the Blue Nile.
Meanwhile, reports have it that while
Egypt was entangled in its Arab Spring in 2011, Ethiopia was busy constructing
its own dam along the Blue Nile.
If so, this spells doom for the
countries downstream because very soon the contribution of the Blue Nile will
drop from 85% to only God knows.
By the way, Egypt is the regional power
but because of this river and other issues, other countries like Ethiopia and
Uganda have since strengthened their own defense forces to withstand any
military action from Egypt over the Nile. Thus, at least for now, the barrel
may not be the answer to the ownership of the Nile question.
The White Nile starts from Lake Victoria
in Uganda and the Blue Nile originates from Lake Tana in Ethiopia and then the
two rivers meet at the Khartoum in Sudan and thereafter flows north via 10
countries to its mouth in the Mediterranean Sea in Egypt.
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