Akobo River

Akobo River

Infobox_River
river_name = Akobo River


image_size =
caption =
origin =
mouth = coord|7.7944|33.0461|display=inline,title|region:ET-GA_type:river into Pibor River
basin_countries = Ethiopia Sudan
length =
elevation =
mouth_elevation =
discharge =
watershed =
The Akobo River is a river on the border between Sudan and Ethiopia. From its source in the Ethiopian Highlands near Mizan Teferi is flows west for convert|434|km|mi to join the Pibor River. [cite book |title= Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary |year= 1997 |publisher= Merriam-Webster |isbn= 0877795460 |pages= p. 17; online at [http://books.google.com/books?id=GN9UQMuNQNkC Google Books] ] [cite book |last= Shinn |first= David H. |coauthors= Thomas P. Ofcansky |title= Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia |year= 2004 |publisher= Scarecrow Press |isbn= 0810849100 |pages= pp. 360-361; online at [http://books.google.com/books?id=zbvd6_eLw_0C Google Books] ] The Pibor flows into the Sobat River, which in turn empties into the White Nile.

History

The boundary between Sudan and Ethiopia was defined for the region near the Akobo River in 1899 by Major H.H. Austin and Major Charles W. Gwynn of the British Royal Engineers. They had no knowledge of the land, its inhabitants, or their languages, and were short on supplies. Rather than defining a line based on ethnic groups and traditional territories, essentially along the escarpment that separates the highlands and the plains, they simply proposed drawing the line down the middle of the Akobo River and parts of the Pibor River and Baro River. This boundary was consummated in the Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty of 1902, resulting in an area in the Ethiopian Gambela Region called the Baro Salient.cite book |last= Collins |first= Robert O. |title= The Nile |year= 2002 |publisher= Yale University Press |isbn= 0300097646 |pages= pp. 76, 210; online at [http://books.google.com/books?id=cql8L7mF11MC Google Books] ]

The Baro Salient is more closely connected to Sudan than Ethiopia, both in terms of natural features and people. The Baro Salient has been used as a sanctuary by Sudanese insurgents during the country's long civil wars. It is difficult for Sudan to exert authority over a region that is part of Ethiopia, and Ethiopia is reluctant to police this remote region and become involved in the politics of Sudan's internal conflicts.

The Akobo has been the subject of several mining surveys. In 1939, engineers of COMINA carried out exploration of the Akobo and its tributaries. North-flowing tributaries appeared to be more promising than the south-flowing ones. Values up to 10 grams of gold per cubic meter were found in Chama creek, and the possible average value could be 0.7 g per cubic meter. In the period 1952-1954 the Ministry of Mines employed as many as 120 miners at a time. They produced an average of 1.66 grams of gold per day. [ [http://130.238.24.99/library/resources/dossiers/local_history_of_ethiopia/A/ORTAK.pdf "Local History in Ethiopia"] (pdf) The Nordic Africa Institute website (accessed 1 May 2008) ]

ee also

*List of rivers of Sudan
*List of rivers of Ethiopia

References


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