• Monday, October 28, 2024
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I don’t expect Okpebholo to reverse my reforms — Obaseki

I don’t expect Okpebholo to reverse my reforms — Obaseki

Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo has expressed optimism that some of his administration’s reforms will outlive the incoming government of governor-elect, Monday Okpebholo.

Obaseki, whose second and last tenure would expire on November 11, expressed the optimism in an interview with newsmen in Lagos.

Speaking on concerns about the continuity of some of his reforms after his administration, Obaseki said that his government had made efforts to institutionalise some of them.

“The people are very aware of our reforms and legacies we are leaving behind. I don’t think because there is a change in government, they will change some of these reforms.

“Even if the government this is coming doesn’t support or encourage them as we used to, they (reforms) will not disappear.

“Beyond this, in the reforms we have undertaken, we have institutionalised or started the process of institutionalising some of them.

Read also: How reforms in key sectors repositioned Edo above others – Obaseki

“The people know, and I doubt if they will keep quiet for long, allowing things to go back to what it used to be without complaining or shouting.

“I’m optimistic that they (reforms) will last,” he said

He said that workers and parents, whose children were enjoying EdoBEST e-learning education and other initiatives, would not allow the incoming All Progressives Congress-led administration to tamper with them.

He said that his administration had restored respect to civil service, revolutionalised education, and improved electricity, internet connectivity and road infrastructure, among others.

According to him, the role of government is to provide infrastructure and to create an enabling environment for citizens to do what they need to do.

“What are the critical infrastructures we need today? Fundamentally, in Nigeria, people need electricity, connectivity, and roads,” he said.

The governor said that with a robust partnership with the private sector, the state government had succeeded in encouraging electricity generation by attracting firms like Azura and Ossiomo Power.

He said that this was to create the state-owned electricity markets and to encourage investments in the distribution of power within the state.

Obaseki said that his administration had ensured stable electricity to power public institutions and infrastructure in metropolitan Benin City.

“We are lucky in a way in Edo, because of our location, we are a core, a hub for electricity.

“Edo is the cheapest point to generate electricity because it costs about a million dollars for a kilometre of gas pipeline.

“And it also costs about a million dollars for a kilometre of transmission. Edo is that point where electricity transmission meets gas transmission.

“So, if you generate electricity in Edo today, you can upload and sell it into the grid. Edo also has the largest onshore reserves of gas. Most of our gas is either deep offshore or in the swamp,” he said.

Obaseki will hand over to Okpebholo of the All Progressives Congress (APC), following his victory in the September 21 governorship election in the state.

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