Chairman, Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC), Professor Attahiru Jega, said that university
vice-chancellors were appointed returning officers during the last general
elections because they were people with track record of credibility.
He also said he planned to return to the
university to teach and conduct research after his tenure as INEC chairman ends on Tuesday.
Jega made this known when he spoke with newsmen
at a dinner organized in his honor by the Association of Vice-Chancellors of
Nigerian Universities (AVCNU) in Abuja on Thursday night.
"We were looking for people with integrity
and we have no doubt that there are many people with integrity in the Nigerian
university system.
So, it is like a ready-made constituency to get the kind of people we needed for the job to be done.
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," he said.
He expressed his appreciation to the goodwill
shown to him by members of the association, adding that he would continue to be
a good ambassador of the Nigerian university system.
Jega said he was delighted to note that the
vice-chancellors were pleased with the feat which they collectively achieved in
the 2015 elections.
He, however, said that all staff of INEC
contributed to the success of the elections as he alone could not take the
glory.
The INEC chairman said he would proceed on leave
and rest at the end of his tenure and return to the university to continue
teaching, research and community service afterwards.
Earlier in his remarks, Professor Joseph Ajienka,
the Chairman of the association, commended Jega for rendering a service to his
country creditably and with dignity.
"I thank also all he vice-chancellors that
helped Jega in performing a national task that gave so much credibility to the
last elections.
"It will go a long way in telling the world
that vice-chancellors are capable of serving their country," Ajienka who
is the Vice-Chancellor University of Port Harcourt, said.
Prof. Vincent Tenebe, the Chairman of the
occasion and the Vice-Chancellor, National Open University of Nigeria, said that
the 2015 elections brought Nigeria to limelight.
According to him, the mode of election is being
copied by many countries, including advanced ones.
In his comments, INEC’s National Commissioner, Dr
Nuhu Yakubu, said that the commission went through extreme pressure in the last
five years
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