Professor Attahiru Jega
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Attahiru Jega, outgoing
chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), has revealed
his post-retirement plan.
Jega’s tenure at the
electoral body elapses in three days, and the former vice-chancellor of Bayero
University Kano (BUK) says he will be returning to his profession thereafter.
He made this known
during an interactive session with journalists at a dinner organized in his
honour by the Association of Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian Universities (AVCNU)
in Abuja on Thursday night.
He also spoke on the reason
he appointed vice-chancellors as returning officers during the last general
election.
TheCable report continues:
“We were looking for
people with integrity; and we have no doubt that there are many people with
integrity in the Nigerian university system,” he said.
“So, it is like a
ready-made constituency to get the kind of people we needed for the job to be
done.
“That is not to say that
only in the universities can you find people of integrity. We know that
anybody who has risen in the system to become a vice-chancellor will not for
anything damage his or her reputation by pandering to the wishes of
politicians.”
Jega expressed delight
that the vice-chancellors were pleased with the feat that they
collectively achieved in the 2015 elections.
He also commended the
staff of INEC for contributing to the success of the elections, saying he could
not have done it alone.
Earlier in his remarks,
Joseph Ajienka, chairman of AVCNU, lauded Jega for rendering good service
to his country and commended the vice-chancellors for the role they played
during the polls.
“I thank also all the
vice-chancellors that helped Jega in performing a national task that gave so
much credibility to the last elections,” he said.
“It will go a long way in
telling the world that vice-chancellors are capable of serving their country.”
Vincent Tenebe, chairman
of the occasion and vice-chancellor, National Open University of Nigeria
(NOUN), said the 2015 election brought Nigeria to limelight, noting that the
mode of election is being copied by many countries.
On his part, Nuhu Yakubu,
an outgoing national commissioner of INEC, said the commission had gone through
extreme pressure in the last five years.
Yakubu described Jega as
“principled, meticulous, hardworking and courageous”, saying those factors
helped him in conducting “two most successful elections in the history of the
country”.
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