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Reflecting on his tour of duty in his eight years as governor of Edo State, the outgoing governor, Godwin Obaseki, has expressed satisfaction that he had been able to undertake bold reforms and projects that had transformed critical areas of the state.
Governor Obaseki listed the sectors that his government had impacted to include education, healthcare, economy, infrastructure and job creation, improving the livelihoods of the people, and placing the state on the path of growth and economic prosperity.
The governor spoke on Tuesday when he commissioned various projects in the state, joined by his Enugu State counterpart, Dr. Peter Mbah, and the former governor of Sokoto State and Senator representing Sokoto South senatorial district, Aminu Tambuwal, as well as other dignitaries.
Some of the projects commissioned included the Benin Technical College and some internal roads within the college spanning over 12 kilometres, as well as the Edo State Education Hub which houses the Ministry of Education, Directorate of Educational Quality and Accountability, Directorate of Higher Education, the State Examination Board, the Edo State Universal Basic Education Board (Edo SUBEB), Library Board and Board of Technical and Vocational Education and Training, among others.

At the Commissioning of the Benin Technical College, Obaseki said his government had restored hope of the people of the state, rebuilt Edo’s economy, and empowered and equipped young people in the state for the future.
According to him, “This project is something I had to do because when I contested as governor of Edo State in 2016, we were facing existential threats. Our children didn’t want to go to school but rather preferred to travel for greener pastures.
“The rate of irregular migration and human trafficking was very scary for me. At the time, over 30,000 young Edo boys and girls were in Libya trying to cross into Europe; we had the data. You can imagine how many died on their way there.”
He said “While campaigning, I promised to restore hope and did what politicians don’t normally do, promising to create over 200,000 jobs, and by grace we have surpassed that.
“These jobs were not created by the government or the civil service as we focused on developing skills and training our young boys and girls in institutions like the Benin Technical School that just wanted hope and opportunity in life.
“When I resumed office on November 12th, 2016, I visited the Secretariat and the next day, I was at the Benin Technical College. If I am to create 200,000 jobs, I need the institution to do this. But what I saw when I came here, I almost wept and I made a commitment that restoring this school and renovating it will be my priority.
“I am glad this afternoon that a week to my exit in office, I can see a rebuilt technical college giving hope to thousands of young boys and girls. This is a greater joy and gift from God as I am leaving office very satisfied. I came, saw the state of the college and I did my best to revamp and rehabilitate it.”
At the commissioning of the education hub which he named after foremost educationist and Commissioner for Education in the old Midwest State, Chief Tayo Akpata, Governor Obaseki said the facility was a testament to his government’s revamp of the education sector.




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