Egypt has legal evidence to prove its rights in the Nile water. However, these rights should be gained through dialogue with the upstream nations, with whom Egypt has strong political and historic ties, Egypt's State Minister for Legal Affairs and Parliamentary Mufid Shehab said Saturday.
Uganda's Minister for water and environmental Maria Mutagamba [L] and Uganda's Deputy Foreign Minister Isaac Musumba sign the Nile Basin Cooperative Framework in Entebbe, on May 14, 2010.
"We do not want to view the deal signed by four upstream nations as a destructive act, but we view it as a mistaken action and we should stop it," Shehab told the Egyptian TV Saturday.
"We never hoped this would happen because it completely goes beyond the framework of cooperation."
Shehab added that his country would follow the legal ways to keep its historic quota in the Nile water, since "Egypt has legal documents that proves its rights".
Four African countries on Friday signed a new treaty on the equitable sharing of the Nile waters despite strong opposition from Egypt and Sudan who have the lion's share of the river waters.
Rwanda, Ethiopia, Uganda and Tanzania signed the new framework while Kenya issued a support statement, an AFP correspondent reported.
Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo were not represented at the meeting in the Ugandan town of Entebbe.
"This agreement benefits all of us and harms none of us," Ethiopia's Water Resources Minister Asfaw Dingamo said. "I strongly believe all Nile Basin countries will sign the agreement."
The upstream countries want to be able to implement irrigation and hydropower projects in consultation with Egypt and Sudan, but without Egypt being able to exercise the veto power it was given by a 1929 colonial-era treaty with Britain.
A senior EU envoy urged seven east African countries not to sign the new deal and to settle differences with Egypt and Sudan first.
Marc Franco, who heads the European Union delegation in Egypt, said a separate deal would "make the political problems that exist worse."
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit warned at the weekend that Cairo's water rights were a "red line" and threatened legal action if a partial deal is reached.
The new agreement, the Nile Basin Cooperative Framework, is to replace a 1959 accord between Egypt and Sudan that gives them control of more than 90 percent of the water flow.
The two countries have expressed fears that their water supply would be severely reduced if the seven other Nile users divert the river with domestic irrigation and hydropower projects.
Asfaw said the "Nile is a resource for all countries. Not a resource for some or limited countries" and ruled out the possibility of conflict.
"I don't think we are going to declare a water war because if you manage it properly..., the Nile is enough for the riparian countries and the only problem we were getting up to now is this resource was not being managed as it should be," he said.
Unlike the 1959 accord which allocated Egypt 55.5 billion cubic metres of the Nile and 18.5 billion to Sudan, the new agreement allows countries to use the waters as they please provided they do not harm others.
The 6,700-kilometre Nile is a confluence of the White Nile, whose source is Lake Victoria in east Africa, and the Blue Nile that springs from the Ethiopian highlands.