 And with the spate of insecurity in river state and the country at large, stakeholders in the Niger Delta region have come together to prefer possible solutions to the challenges plaguing Nigeria. They spoke intensively during a roundtable discussion at the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations, NIPR, in Port Harcourt, River State, stressing the need for leaders to be apolitical in treating the issues. The keynote speaker, Bobo Sofiri-Brown, who spoke on the theme the future of Niger Delta in the current security turmoil in Nigeria, emphasized the need for the federal government to look into the current security challenge, noting that Boko Haram is not the only threat in the country. He emphasized the need for the Niger Delta leaders to improve the economy and concentrate only on crude oil exploration. State chairman of the NIPR, Paulino's, and Serum urged the media to be aware of the roles they play as watchdogs and the society concerning security issues. The federal government, remarkably, does not have a coherent explanation, a coherent report on security challenges in the country. It keeps presenting this as if Boko Haram is our only challenge, whereas the problems have been multiplied. As I pointed out, we have see-by-racy. We have all kinds of gangs fighting for territory to do drugs, to sell minerals in Zanfa. The leaders of the NIPR, at the end of this meeting, will set a national agenda and they'll get the conversation and narrative that will help Nigeria as a country to solve the million of security issues. On his part, a lecturer with the Department of Mass Communication River State University, Professor Godwin Okon, called for support of government in the fight against insecurity. He recommended community management as a possible solution to the insecurity challenge. Most have integration of technology and this integration of technology must be born out of expanding facilities and investments in that particular sector because we can no longer fight security using the antics of yesterday. It is not possible. Times have changed, dynamism rules the world. It is not elderly women, not elderly women that are causing this matter. It is the use, concentration, and tackling this restlessness in the use to also look at job creation. The keynote speaker's dex NIPR to create platforms allow voices of professional groups and associations to be heard and build strength. At the chapter and national level to focus on issues that touch on the economy.