 And welcome back to the Breakfast and Plus TV Africa. Let's move back in history. I'm going back to the year 1981 to talk about a guy called Adam, actually a little boy called Adam Walsh, who of course, it's a pretty similar story to some of the things that we hear here in Nigeria, where kids go to the mall with their moms or with their parents and disappear. It was on this day that Adam Walsh was found dead. His decapitated body apparently was found dead. It was an American boy who was abducted from a Sears department store in the Hollywood Mall in Florida. On the 27th of July 1981, his head was found on this day in, along the Florida Turnpike, almost 130 miles from Hollywood. The, of course, investigation that was carried out showed pretty not very much, except a guy called Otis Tool, who was a serial killer, who confessed to killing Adam Walsh. Unfortunately also for the story, there was no proper evidence. They lost some of the vital pieces of evidence that he should have used to find Otis Tool guilty, and eventually he was able to recant his testimony, even if he eventually died in prison in 2006. But this was a very, very painful investigation. $1,000 was given out as a reward to find this little boy who went missing. Eventually when his body was found, the police was able to draw up a narrative of what may have happened, and of course shared the investigation to show that Otis Tool most likely abducted a little boy and took him for a ride where he killed him in his car, strangulated him with his seatbelt, and cut his head off with a cutlass. The blood traces from the car, they didn't hold any water because they had lost the police, had lost the towel, and lost the cutlass also that Otis Tool allegedly using killing the boy. And so there wasn't actually any 100% proof on who killed the little boy, who would be found guilty. Otis Tool was able to recant his testimony or take back his testimony, confessing to the crime and eventually wasn't found guilty. But it was on this day that Adam Walsh, or his body rather, was found dead. Or was found rather. His head actually, not just his, his body was never found, just his head. Too sad, too sad, too sad. But the great thing is that this was adapted into a movie and people, you know, about 38 million people were able to watch, and probably let it, you know, too, about, you know, just this interesting situation. How do you abduct a boy and you kill him and then, man. But I think it's also, you know, to make people more aware of how careful you should be when you're in public with your kids. You should never let them out of your sight. I've seen a video last week where someone had a little rubber, you know, spiral chain, you know, not a chain but, you know, some rope that they put on their child while they were in the mall. You know, just so they're sure that that child never walks out of their sight because children can be like that. Just disappear in three seconds and you have no idea where they are. They're probably just blown away or carried away with something shiny that they saw and that's how they go. According to the story, he convinced the boy to get into his car, promising him candy and sweets and some cake and some of all of that. And that's, you know, that was the end. So it's a reminder really that the public is not safe. You know, regardless of what city you live in, in the United States and the UK, wherever. And here in Nigeria too, you know, there's no way that it's actually too safe because there's people, there's pedophiles out there. There's, in Nigeria, ritualists. There is murderers out there looking for victims. And so you should always be very, very cautious, you know, of what your kids are doing and where they are at every single time. And for today, I'm going to go back to the year 2003. This year was one of the hottest summers in the history of Europe since about the 1504 they're about, you know. It was so hot in Europe at that time that today in history, August 10, recorded one of the hottest, you know, days in the UK. And the UK recorded its first ever temperature of over 100 degrees Fahrenheit for the first time. Now throughout the month of August, there was an intense heatwave that claimed over 35,000 lives. This heatwave was so bad that, you know, it basically cost fires. And it was just so terrible. People, people fell ill. People, people passed on. France was one of the worst hit. About 15,000 people died in France due to the heatwave. In Germany about 7,000 people died. That majority of the victims were people who were elderly, people who were very young or people who were chronically ill. And this heatwave also cost melting of the glaciers. It cost, you know, avalanches. It cost flash floods. It just came with lots of environmental distress. And we know that, you know, when the environmentalists and scientists come in with all the explanations beyond the surface, they begin to tell you how this is basically cost by global warming and how we can, how we need to take action to prevent climate change. You know, and, you know, progressive every year since then has, you know, been on record to be the hottest year ever, hottest year ever. I'm not sure what the records will be for 2021 because it's been pretty cool, you know, for the most of the year. But I'm sure that as time passes, right now we're talking about, or we haven't shared about that, but if you look at international news organizations, you'll see the wildfires in Turkey are burning out of control. I don't remember if there have been wildfires at this time of the year before. It normally happens sometime at the end of the year, you know, in Australia and California, some of those places. But in Turkey, it is burning out of control and, you know, large parts of the country are being, you know, being burned. So it really, you know, it just tells about global warming and how, you know, we maybe should start taking it more seriously. Unfortunately, we have to do hunger first before we start, you know, thinking of some of the things that we must do. But that's where it's starting from. So that's it for you today in history, 2003, one of the hottest, you know, temperatures in Europe and in fact, a terrible hit wave in the UK. All right, now, of course, in 1981, Adam Walsh, the death of Adam Walsh, on this day, his severed head was discovered in the United States and that was, of course, the end of, you know, his story. We'll take a short break. When we come back, we're moving into our first major conversation for today. We're talking about the PDP and Uche Secundas refusing to resign. Six National Working Committee members have asked that he resigns. What do you think would happen next? So what, you know, can we analyze from all of this? We're going to be speaking with our guest after the short break. Stay with us.