Sudan called the American mediator to continue his efforts to reach "satisfactory ends" regarding the Renaissance Dam crisis, stressing Ethiopia's right to benefit from its water resources.

This came in the words of the Sudanese Foreign Minister, Asma Abdullah, who praised - in a television program - the role of the World Bank and the American mediator, represented by the Treasury Ministry, in bringing the views between the three countries concerned with the file of Al-Nahda Dam (Sudan, Egypt and Ethiopia), and facilitating access to meeting points.

She made it clear that the American mediator was closely following the file and showing great interest in order to achieve a consensus on it between the three countries.

She said that Ethiopia has the right to build dams within its territory, and to benefit from water resources, in accordance with international covenants and covenants and the basic principles signed by Khartoum, Cairo and Addis Ababa.

She stressed the need for the three countries to return to the negotiating table on the dam crisis.

She explained that Sudan has always called for negotiation, as it is the only way to resolve such differences, and she hoped that the negotiations would be held in the earliest time between the delegations of the three countries, and that they would reach satisfactory and satisfactory solutions to their countries' aspiration to benefit from the waters of the Nile.

In the same program, Minister of Irrigation Yasser Abbas said that the Renaissance Dam affected the performance of the dams in Sudan.

The Minister acknowledged that Ethiopia had responded to the observations of Sudan and Egypt regarding the safety of the dam and engineering adjustments had been made.

And at the end of last February, Egypt signed - in initials - an agreement to fill and operate the dam, which was sponsored by the United States with the participation of the World Bank, considering that the agreement was fair, while Ethiopia rejected it and Sudan kept it.

Finally, Egypt submitted an explanatory note to the members of the Security Council regarding developments in the stalled negotiations, since mid-March.

Cairo fears the potential negative impact of the dam on the flow of its annual share of the Nile's water, which amounts to 55.5 billion cubic meters, while Sudan gets 18.5 billion.

While Addis Ababa says, it is not intended to harm Egypt's interests, and the aim of building the dam is mainly to generate electricity.