 Just before we move into our first major conversation for today let's share with you what happened on this day in history. We've spoken a lot to small and about insecurity and killings and murder and you know headers and Boko Haram and whatnot but on this day of course in 2013 was yet another of those incidents where 42 kids were killed in a college in Uyghur Bay State, it's a place called Gujba, the College of Agriculture in Gujba Uyghur Bay State. The report says that at 1am that night Boko Haram in terrorist stormed the male dormitory of the college and started firing their weapons. It says about 42 people were killed, about a thousand of them had to flee into the forest and into the bush to save their lives. They had driven there in a Hilux vehicles or two vans, the terrorists had come there with two vans and opened fire, the mainly Muslim students in that college. It was of course one of the saddest, saddest days in Nigeria's history. I remember that we had woken up that morning to hear these stories and it felt like it was a dream because this you know just was not something that was easy to imagine. You know also remembering that these were just kids that were killed on that day. And of course the stories started to eventually come out to show how it happened and how people were in their sleep when they started to hear gunshots and weapons being fired, 42 people eventually lost their lives on that day in 2013. Sad sad day for Nigeria's history and it's so unfortunate that you know that time like you mentioned we didn't see these kind of incidents too often but now it's become too frequent that it's almost basically losing track of just how many of these attacks are happening on any given day. I don't think whatever we were going to keep track to be honest you know I think there's too many of them that are unreported, too many kidnappings that are also unreported. There is unconfirmed reports that Dr. Chike Akunjili was killed yesterday, we're going to be following up and of course we'll bring you further details on that one once it is confirmed. But you know like I said there's too many of these reports even here in Lagos and Berlin everywhere, there's so many that are unreported I don't think that any agency would be able to properly keep track of the number of lives that have been lost in the last couple of years. So stay with us, our next major conversation is about power generation in Lagos and we'll be speaking to the Commissioner for Energy and Mineral Resources in Lagos State.