I Am Going Back To University To Teach - Former Minister Of Education, Ruqayyatu Rufai

She,
who handed over the affairs of the education ministry to the Minister of State
in the ministry, Chief Nyesom Wike, as directed by the president, told newsmen
that she would be going back to continue with her job as a teacher.
Before
her appointment as a minister, Rufa’i was a professor of Curriculum Studies at
the Bayero University, Kano.
“I
called you here to witness the handing over because as you are all aware my
tenure as minister has expired along with eight others.
“I
am going back to resume my job as a professor of Curriculum Studies at the
Bayero University Kano, that is where I came from on secondment.
“We
should know that a time like this will come because if it does not, death is
surely an end.”
She
expressed gratitude to the President for the opportunity given her to serve as a
cabinet minister.
“I
have enjoyed a close working relationship with the President.
“Of
course, there were times we had our disagreements, but overall we enjoyed
working together.”
Rufa’i,
who also thanked Wike and other officials of the ministry for the support she
enjoyed during her tenure in the ministry, tasked them not to relent in
achieving the sector’s goal of Access and Quality.
In
his remarks, Wike described Rufa’i's exit as ”painful” but said that “when we
are not in control, there is nothing we can do”.
He
said because of the cordial working relations between them, the two had never
been summoned by the president to define their roles.
Wike
thanked the former minister for her good leadership.
“I
therefore implore you, please do not abandon the ministry, continue to give us
the advice you would have been giving if you were here,” he said
Also
in his remarks, the Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Dr McJohn Nwaobiala,
said the change was ”like being hit by a thunderbolt”.
Nwaobiala,
who described Rufa’i as totally different, pledged that the ministry would build
on the foundation she had laid.
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