How PS Kimotho Is Driving Diplomacy Through the Daua Dam
Across the Horn of Africa , rivers do not recognise borders. They rise where they can, flow where gravity allows, and sustain whoever lies along their path. Yet the moment those rivers cross into political space, they become something else entirely. They become questions of ownership, access, control, and sometimes tension. For a long time, countries have tried to manage water as though it belongs neatly within their territories. It never has. That mismatch between natural systems and political boundaries has quietly shaped how development unfolds in this region. It has also limited how far individual countries can go on their own. Kenya knows this reality well. So do Ethiopia and Somalia. Each faces growing pressure on water resources, increasing climate variability, and rising demand from populations that depend on agriculture for survival. These pressures do not stop at the border. They move across it. What is beginning to change is how these shared challenges are being approached. ...