 A no-hold barred media session was held with a special advisor to the governor of Ondostate and director general of the Performance and Project Implementation Monitoring Unit to discuss on the state of security on Ondostate and the way forward to building a major resilient nation with plant-steving news correspondent Emmanuel Odubo-Boko in attendance again. Here's the report. It's not a no-hold barred session where media personnel and the special advisor to the governor of Ondostate and director general of the Performance and Project Implementation Monitoring Unit, engineer Babadji de Akeredulu, to discuss on the level of security in the state. Babadji de Akeredulu noted that the state is regarded as one of the safest in the country today with its own security outfit and motecum spread across the state. On those days, you see one of the safest states in this country. I mean, I look at these papers regularly, you hardly hear of incidences on a daily basis but you would hear of one big incident in Anondo and of course, usually the large ones are the ones that are loudest. But let's look at things holistically from the top, like from a broader point of view. The cases are not as pronounced as you would see in many other states. If you look at this southwest now, let's be honest, in this particular U-type season where they are seen, Bahrain is in Ogun, in Lagos, in Oshun, I don't hear anything about Ondostate right now. Ondostate is relatively quiet and a lot of that is the testament to the collaborative work and that's to answer your next question. You know, they found the middle ground for the police, for the army, for motecum to work beautifully. If you come to Ondostate now, in the general towns of every city, I think there's no other, there's no corner, you know, in a motecum vehicle with their small little like camper in all the major towns. Special advisor who reacted to the issue of restructuring, which has been the call of many Nigerians today, said every state must be autonomous, as engineer Kuridoli gave his insight as to the actual meaning of restructuring. Having to always go to Abuja to do things that never really made that much sense to me. Because what you tend to see is you just see a disconnect between, and this is a cross board, multiple power startups, you name it, you still see a full blown disconnect between what happens there and what happens in the states. I've always been very pro-restructuring because what that just means is you know that there are some things that will be Abuja's responsibility and it's clearly stated and then states will have some level of autonomy to at least address many of their issues. Despite assurances and claims of improved security by the Nigerian government, it has only deteriorated across the country with reported cases of kidnapping and bonditry making daily headlines. Emmanuel Urrububu, plus the news.