El País Sin Mar que Puede Dejar a Egipto Sin Agua
Uganda is landlocked, yet it controls one of the most vital water sources on the planet. In this extreme geography documentary, we travel from Lake Victoria to the source of the Nile to understand why a territorial decision made in Uganda can shake Egypt without a single shot being fired. This is not a tourist video about Uganda. It is an in-depth look at a country where water defines the economy, food, energy, borders, and the survival of millions. On Lake Victoria, the fishermen of Kalangala face a constantly shifting system each morning: unpredictable storms, invasive species, water hyacinth, disrupted markets, and immense human pressure on Africa's largest lake. The journey then takes us to Jinja, the source of the Nile River. There, geography becomes political power. The Nile flows through eleven countries and sustains the lives of more than three hundred million people, but it also carries with it a long history of tension between the countries upstream and Egypt. Uganda's dams, like Bujagali and Karuma, are more than just infrastructure: they are a declaration of sovereignty, energy, and a vision for the future of a country that needs to power its cities. We also traveled up to the Rwenzori Mountains, the mythical Mountains of the Moon, where snow still lingers on the African equator. But the glaciers are melting, and with them, an ancestral calendar that for centuries guided agriculture, water, and the lives of the Bakonzo people is disappearing. When a mountain changes, not only does the landscape change: knowledge, memory, and ways of life change. In northern Uganda, districts like Adjumani, Arua, and Yumbe reveal another side of the map: the pressure of hosting more than a million refugees while local communities share land, firewood, schools, roads, and water wells. Here, the tension isn't understood from behind a desk, but rather from the precise moment a well dries up two months ahead of schedule. This video explores Uganda as a key territory for understanding the geopolitics of water, the Nile conflict, the climate crisis, migration pressures, human life in extreme environments, and how maps determine the fate of millions. Because extreme geography isn't always an impassable desert or an insurmountable mountain. Sometimes it's a lake that feeds millions, a dam that triggers alarms in another country, a glacier that erases centuries of knowledge, or a well that stops working when it's needed most. If you're interested in documentaries about geography, maps, global tensions, natural resources, strategic routes, water conflicts, and places where a territorial decision can change the future of millions, this channel is for you.

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