 All right, you're still watching Waze. Now the EMO assembly has adopted or adopted a resolution proclaiming an international day for women in maritime to be observed on the 18th of May every year. And this observance will celebrate women in the industry and is intended to promote the recruitment, retention and sustained employment of women in the maritime sector. I love this day. I love this day. I love this day. That's a welcome development. I'm very welcome. My brother is a sailor and he actually told me that he had ladies working in the ship with him. So he said that they are quite hard working and they are actually stepping up to the plate in respect of, it's not just a man's terrain but they can actually match up with the men in that space. So yes, I totally applaud this day and I'm in sync with it. Absolutely. All right, so let's quickly run through what we found in the news. Gloria, I'll come to you first. My what's in the news is about, again, abuse. So it says a 24-year-old pregnant woman, Abigail Eguta, has been arrested in Anambara State for allegedly brutalizing her seven-year-old nephew for eating fish and failing to recite the English alphabet. The woman was apprehended after certain neighbors took the victim identified as Sunday to the Office of the State's Women and Social Welfare Commissioner. Sunday is said to be the son of Eguta's biological sister who brought to live, who brought to live with her barely a year ago. This went on and on and what really struck me here is she said, I'm very sorry I didn't intend to blind him or beat him in the eyes but I mistakenly did. Please forgive me, it is the handwork of the devil, she said, again. We will keep talking about this until people know there should be consequences for this and also for people or neighbors or people close to people who are doing this can also react the way because one thing that caught my attention is the people who reported this were the neighbors. So if we are very much aware of this then it's going to reduce this to a certain extent because it's easy for people to react when they see some certain actions which are not appropriate. So we will not stop talking about this as long as it persists we are not going to stop talking about it. We'll keep talking about it until we drive home this message to end this sort of violence and brutality. I need to understand where this is coming from, right? Because like literally, and this is not me trying to maybe be like a goody two shoes or something I've never really like taken, you know I don't know how people like you must really have wickedness in your spirit because I've never hit anybody to the extent that I cause physical I'm not to talk of to the point of getting someone blind. You know, it doesn't make any sense to me. I don't understand. You know, that's why we say as a teacher there is a skill you use to teach children who are actually in that age. It's not the boy's fault that the boy couldn't recite the ABC. It was the style in which he was using to, you know, teach the boy. So she could have even found a way to actually interact with the boy to get the boy. You don't even get what I'm even saying, EC. I'm saying that this thing is innate in us. Look at the topic we're discussing today. I told you about it, EC. You know what I'm saying? How do you get to that point where I am angry with you and the next thing I want to do is to cause physical harm. Like, I don't understand how we're not able to be cultured to control ourselves. Like, yes, to be restrained because I have never, like it has never crossed my mind. Somebody has physically slapped me before. I just stood and I was looking at the person. Like, I don't even know what to say. I don't even know what to do. Like, I don't understand how you get to that point where you are so infuriated that you feel like you need to cause bodily harm on somebody else, no matter how angry you are. I don't understand. This thing is just something that is deeper than what we know. I think, like we always say, we don't like oppression unless we're the ones doing it. We don't like abuse unless we're the ones doing it. Sometimes, some people would excuse it and say, oh, I don't know. I don't know how I got it. I don't know what came over me, yes. That's absolutely rubbish. You say it's the devil's work. That's rubbish. I mean, we have to get to a point where people need to be held accountable for their actions. So I really want to find out. Are there cases where things like this, you find people being persecuted and are in prison? Because most of the time, we see this on the news and it ends there. We don't know what happens afterwards. Maybe because we're not following up, but I'm really curious to know that. I am very sure that some people have gone to jail because of these things. I can bet you. That's if you have a judge that understands what they're doing. There's a young girl I saw on social media. She was celebrating. This was someone that was termed a witch. She's now in the US, I think, she was celebrating her parents that came to rescue her from the hands of all those people accusing her to be a witch. I know that. I remember I saw it in passing in the course of last week on social media because they had already labelled this girl a witch. They know all the brutality that comes with it. Yeah, let's take your story then and come to you, Isi. Okay, so our headline is President Buhari grants 65 ex-core members automatic employment. The president today in Abuja granted automatic employment in the Federal Civil Service to 65 former members of the National Youth Service Corps. In addition to this employment, the president also awarded them scholarships to pursue their education up to doctorate degree level at any university of their choice within the country. Furthermore, he announced the cash price of 250,000 for each of the top award winners and 200,000 for order award recipients, including the physically challenged ex-core members under the NYSE Hope Alive Programme, 65. It is worth it. Isi, please, let's move on. My story is it's kind of a mixed feeling for me. It has, it's prose and it has its come. So I'm going to take the headline and it says, co-joined, conjoined Nigerian twins undergo separation surgery in Saudi Arabia. These twins' names are Hussein, Hussainah and Hassanah, basically, and these twins were born in January, 2022 in Kaduna, and they were joined at the abdomen, the pelvis, the lever, the intestine, urinary and reproductive systems, and finally the pelvic bone area. So you can see that the surgery is going on basically and it is going to be a long one of about 14 hours or so. And we have the, they were able to actually do this in Saudi Arabia through the help of an NGO and from Nigeria, basically. They, the government of Saudi Arabia actually offered this treatment to them for free without them having to pay a dime. They were actually airlifted with their parents last December, I think, basically. Now, this was disclosed by the presidential spokesperson, Garabashil. Now, this is where this thing actually got to me because we have a team of about 35 doctors, medical experts and nurses that are participating in this procedure as we speak. While we pray that this actually goes well, this story actually resonated with me because it is coming at a time where the doctors currently in Nigeria are down in their tools. And once again, they are on strike without any, because the government of Nigeria has again failed the doctors to do what they were supposed to do, to pay them or increase the salary or do what they were supposed to do the need for. And this team, I can suggest that at least one or two of them are Nigerians. There is no way because we have had brain drain of doctors living in Nigeria and going abroad to actually do what they have to do to survive. So I can attest to this that probably we might have not just one Nigerian in this team, we might have more than that one. What stops us, our government, from actually helping the health sector currently and actually boosting our health sector so that this can be done? We had Dr. Afroko, who was actually, he has some sort of surgery done in his head in Nigeria, earlier this year. Let me say, you see, the truth is, right, when it comes to medical issues, right, is not for, it's not just one thing that needs to be done. I think Nigeria's problem, we need to fix everything. Because I mean, you are doing makeup, they are taking like- It's a haulage. I mean, is it this kind of surgery? I mean, when I looked at the areas, you said they were joined at, abdomen, pelvic, liver, you know, that's the very, very critical, what's it called? Surgery. Yes, I mean, they are conjoined twins that is very, is easy to separate. This one is going to be very, very intense. It's an organ. Yeah, because it's organ. It's an organ, you know. Amongst it, but the point is that- I get your point. We had a government who were actually stepping up to the plate. So that's what I'm saying to you that this, our problem in Nigeria is hydra-headed. I said this all the time. So we can't really just solve healthcare alone because there's a lot that is happening. We're complaining about the roads. We're complaining about infrastructure. We're solving energy issues. We have energy, light problem and all of that. So it's not one problem. When Governor Acquabio built the world-class hospital in Acquabio, I went to that hospital. Beautiful hospital. He could not go there for headache treatments because again, it's not just to have the facility. They can import all these facilities in. What happens to the, what's it called? What powers it? What are the other factors? A friend of mine's older sister and the husband, they are both medical doctors. They are in Saudi Arabia and they tell you the living conditions, how they treat them. Like they are kings. Fantastic people. So it's multiple problems. Are they ready to pay better? Are they ready to do a lot of things? It's not just saying we want to have good healthcare. It comes with a lot of, you know. Is it total college? Yeah, it comes with a lot of package. It's total college. All right, so my story is actually linked to our conversation today. So maybe we'll just take the video then we'll go on a break and we'll continue the... What the hell? Who are you? Somebody wins. It's an event. I guess that was the last one. So from that video, you see that on one hand, rather some police people were brutalizing a young man. So the second video is actually my story. So the police inspector, I think the command, legacy command has gone in search for those officers that did that. So we'll go on a break. When we come back from the break, we'll have our conversation for today. Stay with us.