“Tefera is a
person who is a well versed in the sector,” said Asfaw Dingamo,
minister of Water Resources. “Though I did not agree with Musa’s
move to resign, I think Tefera is a very experienced and a person of
high caliber.”
Experts within
the Ministry told Fortune that Tefera is the best person for
the job and has a good potential to bring in results.
The Nile Basin
Initiative was launched in 1999 with the help of the World Bank to
reduce the potential for conflicts related to the Nile. It unites 10
countries directly affected by the Nile Basin including Eritrea
participating as an observer.
The Initiative
aspires to benefit all parties in a transitional arrangement until a
permanent framework is in place. But the initiative is purely an
advisory one. The agreement to participate in the Nile Basin
Initiative does not deny any participating country’s right to
implement river projects unilaterally.
Tefera has
worked in the water sector for 22 years. His career goes back to the
defunct Water Resources Authority where he worked in the Design
Study Supervision Department. He later moved to the Ministry’s Dams
and Energy Design Department where he worked for just over a year.
Tefera also
worked in the Eastern Nile Technical Regional Office as Interim
Manager where he already worked in the Nile Initiative under the
Eastern Nile Ministerial Advisory Committee.
“My plan is to
bring together scholars in the field to work in a team as it is a
national issue,” said Tefera, who graduated as a civil engineer from
University of Calcutta, India in 1985.
Musa’s foreign
travels put him at odds with the state minister, Adugna Jebessa,
himself a veteran of the Ministry, according to reliable sources.
When Musa left office, he told Fortune that he could not
continue to work with the new state minister, and that his
resignation was personal and nothing to do with government policies.
Unlike during Musa’s tenure, Tefera will report directly to Minister
Asfaw.