The Government Chairman of Edo State Common Primary Schooling Board (SUBEB), Ozavize Salami, on Monday launched the AIO2 initiative to mobilise voters for the September 21 governorship election within the state.
The SUBEB Chairman, who was in Akoko-Edo to intimate residents and social gathering faithfuls on quite a few laudable programmes of the Obaseki-led administration in Edo State, used the occasion to set in movement the launching of “Edo is healthier with AiO2”, a political motion to spice up the probabilities of the Folks Democratic Occasion candidate, Asue Ighodalo and his working mate, Osarodion Ogie on the polls.
Salami, a veteran grassroots mobiliser, additionally used the chance to present out palliatives and put smiles on the faces of indigenes throughout Wards 1 and a couple of of the native authorities space, noting that different wards would additionally profit within the close to future.
She stated, “The Edo is healthier with AIO2 was launched to make sure complete victory of Asue Ighodalo, Osarodion Ogie and the Folks’s Democratic Occasion within the September 21 governorship election.
“I benefit from the help of by the Deputy Governor, Marvellous Omobayo and the Government Chairman of Akoko-Edo Native Authorities Council, Tajudeen Alade..I’m grateful to them.
“Edo State has set the tempo so far as governance and primary schooling is worried in Nigeria with many states already emulating the usual being set by Edo State,” she added.
The SUBEB Chairman hailed governor Godwin Obaseki who has carried out properly for Akoko-Edo and urged social gathering trustworthy to vote for PDP
Whereas enumerating the good points recorded by Edo State SUBEB below her management, Salami stated that main college academics in Edo State now use trendy strategies of instructing by way of provisions of modern studying supplies for pupils.
She recommended the governor for immediate cost of employees’ salaries and for being the primary Governor in Nigeria to pay civil servants the N40,000 and present N70,000 as minimal wage.