 Alright you are still watching Waze. Now International Plastic Free Day is a call to action and brings attention to the plastic we use every day. Now on May 25th, it commits to making no single use of plastic for one day, including bottles, takeouts, food containers, utensils, bags and wrappers. Over 380 million tons of plastic is produced every year, half of all that plastic is single use, meaning it's thrown away after just one year. Since only 9% of all plastic get recycled, most of it ends up littering our communities, filling our landfills and polluting our oceans. So it's important that we set aside this day just to observe how we can manage the use of plastic. I mean, we don't pay attention to these things here in Nigeria, but honestly speaking, when you go abroad, like no carry your bag, you know, like my sister literally has two big cartons, like open cartons where she buys food. You know those cartons are like half. She has it in her boot permanently. So for every time she goes shopping, the carton is there to be able to put in because nobody will give you any paper bag. I remember one time I went to France, Nigeria. It's a mall to buy, I was buying clothes and all of that. First of all, the lady was looking at me because everybody had walked into that store. No, they would just come out once more bag like this. Me, I was packing. I was packing. When did the time call reach to give me to pay and check out a lot of that? The lady was looking at me, so how do you hope to take the bag? You know, my French is not so great, but I was trying to, do you know the end of the giving me a bag for dustbin? Because they don't even have it in the store. They don't, yeah. The end of the giving me dustbin bag to be able to carry the load that I bought because they kept on looking at me. I was wondering why were they looking at me. Now I understand that, okay, I think I overstepped my bounds. But how do you address plastic, you know, because it's a major problem. Especially in a city like Lagos. How do you bring back that load where you can flog people? No, honestly speaking. Like you're throwing it out of cars, on the road. And then in the drainages and especially this... Sashay water. Sashay water and then this takeaway pack. It's horrible. We're actually around problem. I feel like people should just keep their trash in the car when they're in the car and then they just trash it. It's too much to ask. It's too much to ask. And I'll try to... The most diliform is so easy to just... they don't see it as... It used to be a time that that's what you know. That if you try, they'll flog you. Even the bus you take, a public bus you take. Yes. As with everything in Nigeria, when there is no enforcement, over time, people get rather complacent. I just want the government to just give us go ahead. Everybody have Kuboku in your car. I cite you. Do you understand? Because I've seen people do it. You throw it out, they'll come down. They will throw it back inside your car. I know some African countries where they will say, you have to pick it up. Not just maybe place of normal citizens. We want to pick it up. Even Benna Republic, they don't throw things anyhow. Like we have to stop it. It's madness. Because we're complaining about... look at yesterday, I left the studio at 9.30. I didn't get home until 12 midnight. Why? It rained and there was traffic. So the whole roads were flooded. What causes the floods? What blocks the drainage? Come on. So we need to be serious about this plastic thing in this country. We have to. We have not even talked about the impact it has on fishes. Because now you end up buying fish that have plastic in their system. It ends up coming back to you ourselves. The ocean is degrading the oceans. It's crazy. So we have to really be serious about it. Let the government take it seriously. So who are we starting with? So it's about what's been trending on Twitter about a police official called Fauzi. I hope I get her name correctly. Isiak, who was detained because she tendered her resignation letter. So it reads, the spokesman of the Lagos State Police Command, Khundiyin, has said that a police officer, Fauziya Isiak, was detained because she absconded from duty. It further reads that on Thursday morning, Isiak took to Twitter, to her Twitter account, saying that she was detained for resigning from the force. According to her, she tendered her resignation letter in 2022 on several occasions, but it remained unapproved since then. So apparently she stopped coming to work and she was then detained with the reason being that she misrepresented facts in her tweets and that on one of her, on her letter of resignation, her letter of resignation was not approved and therefore it's not accepted. She can only stop working once her letter of resignation has been approved. Since 2022. So it's a long read, so I don't want to go through the whole, something is in most of the very popular newspapers. So my question is, is this not indirect slavery? So I don't want to work anymore. I've tendered my resignation form. I'm just saying. I'm fighting an example. Six months ago I tendered my resignation letter. If you're breaking your resignation letter. Are you kidding me? I arrested and detained you. Let me ask you one thing. What the hell is this for crying out loud? Since 2022. Like this is almost, this indirect slavery now. So people don't know about it. Wait now, is there a reason why her resignation was not approved? That's not approved. Is there something maybe she's holding on to that? She under investigation. Is she under investigation? What exactly is the reason? Exactly. She would submit a resignation and it was not approved. And then you know, I don't know. Like the military, you know, they have a duty, you know, like four years or two years or three. I don't know if that applies to the Nigerian. You must at least see within that year. A particular period of time before you can. I think those are information we need to confirm. But the disturbance factor, I don't, we need to confirm that on Twitter is that most of our broad days to social media said she's been referring from seeing her family, even access to lawyer and all of those things. I don't, it's not that. I don't, it's not that. But that's, yeah. So I think maybe there's more to something. The police has to respond to this. This is real strong allegations. Tell me your story. Okay, well my story is a video. What's the video about? Well, the video with them, Edoche, when he was trying to greet the oba and some people on the internet were like he's supposed to have prostrated as respect and reverence for the crown. But then, Edoche is a title star. He's a title star. He's a title chief in the Igbo culture and a title chief does not bow for anybody. Do you get? Plus, if we're looking at this age-wise, he's a lot older than this person. Only of his age. If he's a lot older than he is age-wise, then because he's a title chief, he cannot, there's no way. So the best he could have done was to greet him the way Igbo people do. He's a title chief or a king in this case. But some people were like, because he's a Yoruba king, he should have done this. But the beautiful thing about this video is that I think that the culture shock was handled properly. Because the king was not... He didn't look like white, you know. I don't think he's enough respect that Edoche walks to him where he was sitting. So he greeted him the way Igbo man greeted someone in his position. And I think that that's fine. We were a country with diverse cultures. So you can't expect one person to bow to your own culture because your culture is too strong. I was just going to say that I saw a video where Ketensho went to greet Ketensho. In fact, Tia came to my house. Immediately she went into the room. She had two knees. He held her head. Prayed for her and kissed her on the forehead. Do you understand? So he's a deity. I don't understand. He's a great ... If you say it's... He's a great ... He's a great... Again, if we talk about Yoruba people being people of culture, I would imagine that even the only nose ... That's why I said if we're going to look at this age-wise, you don't expect this person to be more than 4 years old. And it's not in his palace. This is a party. They are a party, a social event. Even if it is a palace, it is when even though they are like your story. So this one is a happy news for me. The headline is two remaining kidnapped FGC Yauri girls released after seven days. And you know this story broke in 2021, 17th of June when Bandics invaded the school. That's Federal Government College Benin Yauri in Kirby and it was reported that some of the girls had become teenage mothers. About four others were pregnant. And I remember that there was a lot of opera then, how they would have run into school and don't know that. But apparently the government, the state government could not meet the demands of the Bandics. I think they requested for about a hundred million. So it fell to the families of these kidnapped kids who had to raise that funds. But I don't know, as sad as the situation is for me, them being reunited with their families is... a parent that goes to sleep every night. You know, exactly. So having them come back home to their families is just something of joy and I'm happy. We are talking about this call card whether Nigeria has progressed on that president Yauri. This is one major issue. So he said, and this is referring to our president in his remark, his fairway speech that he gave. He attended his last FEC Executive Council meeting. He thanked the staff at the villa for accommodating them for the past eight years. He's also thanked all his ministers, appreciating all of them and saying that despite many odds and challenges they sustained the synergy and that translated into many achievements, saying that he's proud that they gave their best. The president also directed the ministers to continue on their duty posts and avoided last minute rush and he said they should work with the new administration. I don't think normally it's supposed to dissolve your cabinet. He didn't dissolve this particular cabinet. He said in case in the course of their years together, ranging from the newest additions to the oldest positions for the past seven and a half years we have differed on many issues. I urge that we understand that those positions were for the collective good. No one should keep grievances or carry those differences forward. For those of us that will not directly be in government I know that I am one of such. He said he wanted to go back to his farm. I ask that we continue to provide support in whatever way we can if called upon by the great party that's the All Progressive Congress that has come to stand. I mean he attributed all the good work and good we received by the administration to God's intervention adding that he can God for strength and for keeping all of them together. He looks forward to going back to Daurah and seeing I look forward to seeing many of you disproving that Daurah has not become too distant because I am no longer present. Uncle, you should know power is not the chair that they follow. Forget all those things this is the chair. Uncle Daurah will be distant. It's not Nigerians who are dealing with this. This is the seats that they are after. If that seat is gone you are gone. Power is transcends. I mean very transcendent. I wish us all the best and hope to hear good news from Daurah. Thank you God, the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Thank you our president. We'll come back to you. No, he's still president. President for life. That's what they call it. Until they tell us that he's now former until May 29th. We want to break when we come back from that break we want to see the score card of President Muhammad Bwari as Nigeria progressed under his leadership. Stay with us Daurah.