 All right, welcome back. It is a technophile edition of the breakfast. It's time for us to take a look at the headlines on some major dailies. And then off the press with our guests, Chris Cain de Wando, a member of the Chartered Institute of Abitrators in the UK, is ready to join us on off the press this morning. But first, let's look at what the headlines are saying. We'll begin with the Punch newspaper. The Punch newspaper leads with Angotay Refinery, petrol heats market July, FG to save seven trillion naira. The writers there plan project export to 53 African countries and to toxic fuel supply. The Angotay, Buhari says refinery is a game changer and MFLE projects 12,000 megawatts per. There you have a picture there, President Mohamed Buhari, Haji Ali Kodangotay, Governor Samuel Love Lagos, so many dignitaries there. Everyone, who is everyone in Nigerian government is there, was there yesterday. It was a very colorful event. Nigeria put, you know, in a lamp light there in a very positive light. It's so beautiful to see. And so going down, you have my admin boosted Navy's capacity with 20 ships, Buhari. Details of that can be found on page 43. Operators fault removal of Nama Managing Director, 26, page 26 is where you find details of that. Governors elect protest as outgoing governors shown transition panels. You find details of that on page 44 of the Punch newspaper. And on the masthead, you have Tribunal rejects live broadcast. Supreme Court decides anti-Tinibo suit Friday. Page two is where you find details of that. From the Punch newspaper, we're moving to the next, which is the Nation newspaper. The Nation newspaper leads with petrol, diesel, others to flow from Dangote refinery July. And the rider there, 40% of output from the 650,000 barrels per day facility for export. Above the masthead, you have Sirika, more heads to roll in aviation agencies. 2.2 billion narrow terminal takes off. You have details of that on the inside of the Nation newspaper. Tinibu will support Navy, says Buhari. Details of that on page 25. President signs social investment agency bill, others. And why judiciary must resist technical judgments. Page 13 is where you find details of that. All right, so from the Nation newspaper, we move to the next, which is the Daily Trust. The Daily Trust newspaper. Expectedly, it's leading with Dangote refinery, a game changer. It's how President Buhari has described it here on the Daily Trust newspaper. The riders, flags of Lake Chard oil drilling today. Nigeria to be self-sufficient, Dangote. To generate $21 billion, employ over 100,000 youth African company for Africa by an African entrepreneur, Aikowas. Details of that on page 4 of the Daily Trust newspaper. Going down, you have Sudan crisis. Nigerian pilgrims to pay $100 hike. And right down, you have youth protesting jobs against killings, call for self-defense. Details of that is on page 6. Erufai deposes two monarchs, district head. Details of that is on page 6. And Supreme Court rules on seeking to nubus shatimas disqualification today. Page 13 is where you find that on the Daily Trust. From the Daily Trust, we move to the Guardian newspaper. The Guardian news enterprise leading with telcos, rising revenues, profits fail to reflect in quality of service. You find details of that on page 6 of the Guardian newspaper. $18.5 billion to release first product in August. For some of the newspaper, I did say July. But the Guardian is saying it's going to be in August. So you have the pictures there of the dignitaries who were present at the commissioning of the Angotera refinery yesterday in Lagos. PEPC dismisses atiku abyss requests for live telecasts of proceedings. Details inside the Guardian newspaper. Relief for travelers as Buhari commissions second Niger bridge today. Second Niger bridge will be commissioned today. And above the mast head, you have Buhari's fragile pieces. More hardware, less safety. Well, that's the much we'll be taking from the front page of the Guardian newspaper. And as I told you earlier, I have my guest analyst, Chris Kende Wando. Good morning, Chris. Good morning. Thanks for having me this morning. Chris Kende Wando is a member of the Chartered Institute of Obitrators in the UK. But Chris is joining us from... Chris, are you in Port Harcourt, Abuja or Lagos? Because you're a man about town. Where are you joining us from this morning? I'm back in Lagos. Oh, you're back in Lagos. Welcome back toiku. Thank you very much. All right. Let's start off with the good news that every Nigerian is talking about. Indeed, all Africans, I imagine, are talking about what Dangote is doing for us. So the Punch newspaper leads with Dangote Refinery, Petrol Heats Market July, FG to save $7 trillion. Nara, let's start with that. Yes. I like the way one of the papers put it, Dangote Refinery, a game changer. This is a game changer in our energy sector, which have been commercialized for years now that we don't have working refineries. We have four refineries in Nigeria, government goods through the NNPC, the one in Cardona, the one in Worley, and also two in Port Harcourt, the primary one and two in Port Harcourt, where none of them is functioned, which has led to our importing over 95 percent of our daily consumption of petroleum products in over two decades now. That was not what we're used to in the 80s and the 90s, that is where we find ourselves. And year in, year out, the federal government millions and millions of dollars into tonnara maintenance, which was never done, became a contact pipe for some individuals in government and then to steal our common wealth. So, and we've seen the prices skyrocketing on a daily basis because of importation, and we are left with market forces, recently been the fight, the war between Ukraine and Russia, which has also skyrocketed the prices of petroleum products and where we are the, seems to be the only country in the world where we produce crude oil in large quantities that import petroleum. So, this is a game changer for me and is a work on development. 650,000 pairs of petroleum products daily basis, that should be able to meet our daily consumption and even provide more for exports. So, what government could not do in about 20 years, what the Buhari government could not do in 80 years of promising engines to provide refineries, one individual have done it. So, as your question is, that would be bigger than the Nigerian government, but the gundi is also that is that Nigeria has 20% everything and the refineries meaning that our whole money is there. So, congratulations to Nigeria and it's also coming at an auspicious time when we are thinking with the issue of removing the big elephant in the room, which is the subsidy regime, which has also another area of siphoning money, we know how much we are losing on a monthly basis to this subsidy. And the incoming government said that they are going to eat the ground running by removing petroleum subsidy once it takes over as a Singapore's government said that. So, if it comes in in May and they will live by June, so it is coming at a very, very auspicious time and that will save Nigeria a lot of money, which save us a lot of foreign exchanges, which cannot be channeled into other areas. But the whole of this euphoria, I have my fear. My fear as an individual as a Nigerian is the fact that monopoly may come into play and that is meaning that the equity is going to determine how much petroleum product is going to be sold in Nigeria and that is a serious competition that for me is the challenge. So, we are at the back and call of dangote, say we are going to regulate the crisis, that is what we don't know for now. Yeah, that's a good point you've made. However, we are first of all excited that it would appear that the days of long queues, fair crises, adulterated, imported fuels and all of that may be a thing of the past going forward. You have raised a very important point about monopoly. As of 2020, about 17 companies were given valid licenses to do what dangote has done and we're wondering why they have not kicked off yet. Do you see this dangote coming online, coming up and encouraging these others into doing theirs, building their own refineries and reducing monopoly? Yes, there are so many factors. Dias is not as large as that of dangote one. Dias are socialized to a larger extent and they are called, they are just smaller refineries. And yes, the reasons for, they are not taking a formal reason that it's one, inappropriate pricing of petroleum products in Nigeria and I believe that we're going to venture they're not going to make profits. Every businessman goes into the business with the idea of making profit and so if they look at it and they look at the templates and the ROI for them is not what's invested in them, there's nobody's going to invest. So it is also the issue of this so-called subsidy removal. So now that we are going to face the reality of the subsidy removal, I have initially thought that we should start it gradually, but the way it's going with the dangote refinery place, I think that we just do it with the subsidy refinery which has become a huge means of tea-free by our big people our big people. And also we've already been also able to cut down to a larger extent the food for eat theft, especially within the Niger Delta area with the implementation of the services of Tumpolo who has been able to be able to be able to leave this in the board. But good news also is that I had an arrest on Redan, another refinery of Pogwa, 200,000 agnoreal capacity. It's also been planned for a pipeline state by BOA. There is a rival individual to be able to dangote. If you know BOA very well, the one BOA cement, BOA group. Another one is being planned. I don't know when that will take off. It's good to take off. Then we just get to not to be only say sufficient in production of petroleum products and by produce, not just petroleum, because we are talking about petroleum. Yes, the by-products. Yes, by-products, we are talking of kerosene, we are talking of diesel, we are talking of petrofuel, especially the petrofuel as well. If you look at the price of kerosene now, it has skyrocketed to the point that people in the rural area cannot be put up. So it's not just about petrofuel, it's not just about petroleum, it is about diesel, it's about kerosene, it is also about aviation. And are the by-products that we don't even talk about because we don't use them on a regular basis. Yes, we know that by-products includes the one that you use for your vesting and the rest of them. Exactly. So we use for plastic, polythanes and the rest of them. So it's a very, very huge expression. And it's the biggest in Africa. But people are making the mistake that it's the biggest refinery in the world. No, it's not the biggest refinery in the world. It's just the seventh biggest in the world. But Gupta Sanjay did say, Gupta Sanjay, Gupta Sanjay of Tangotay did say that it is, you know, it is the biggest in the world. I guess it's, you know, just on the spur of the moment, excitement and all of that. Let us, let our viewers, is refinery trade, that's what it's all about, refinery trade. You are talking about refinery trade, then Tangotay is the biggest in the world. But if you are talking of the totality of the biggest refinery in the world, the biggest is in India. And it produces about 1.2 million barrels of petroleum products on a daily basis. That's just two times the size of Tangotay. But that does not remove the product. We have a very, very big investment in our corridor. Well, thank you so much for that information there. Well, let's move from the PANCH newspaper to the Deli Trust. Above the mast head, you have experts want to know to insist on synergy among security forces. Well, yeah, that is a good one. Signature and we've been saying that the problem we've had is interagency collaboration has been the problem of energy. And that is why we see this high level of insecurity. The police doesn't share knowledge, they are this thing with the army, the army doesn't share with them. Everybody is doing his own thing. And you cannot be able to walk like that. In fact, it came to a point that the minister, I think the minister of defense or I can't remember which of them. Sometimes it goes through a year or two to try that that the problem is that we're not having interagency collaboration and there's supposed to be a cognitive person in charge of that. So, I look forward to interagency corporations among the top security agencies so that it's problem we are presently facing in a real security in the land. By the time everybody comes and puts us together, we can be able to solve the problem. We may not, the challenge for me now and it was Christian story coming out now is that insurgency has resurfaced in most parts of the North, especially in Plata State. We've just heard that. You just took that out of my mouth Chris. I was going to, I was waiting for you to land so I could bring in that headline coming from Plata State, where the youth are protesting and just against the killings. You know, it happened in Mango, very horrible thing there. Yes, we heard that in the past few days, over 130 people have been killed, 130 people who fled to the state. The heisman are running riot also in Benway State and children and farmers are being killed. They're not just killing the baby, they're killing them. This is crucial. This is not something that you want to care. In some countries, some governments get rid of, are pulled down just by the death of just two or three people. But here we are counting, what we just counting non-pagnetic in lives. And we're not even officially at war, so to speak. We're not really, we're not at war and you have Nigerians dying in their hundreds. If you look at the countries that are in war, in Ukraine and in Russia, you don't see them, you don't see where they sit, 100 people died. In one case. Attack, three people died, four people died, even the mass shootings you see, five people died, seven people died, not in this magnitude. And may not be, I don't know if it is that, that is what has been reported. I tell you that the number is more than double that. Vanguard came out with a report at the weekend that during the eight-year reign of President Muhammad Uqbali, 63,111 Nigerians were killed by bandits. Are you doing that mass? 63 million Nigerians were killed by terrorists and bandits. That is one that the Uqbali too have figured. Exactly. It is far, far more than that. So this is a country, we're not, it's not a country in war or at war, but it seems that we're at war with each other. So I hope that the incoming government will take security as a burden because everything hinges on security. If you lose that insecurity, then you affect that because you affect economy, you affect social lives, you affect agriculture. And even foreign investment, direct foreign investment, nobody wants to come and invest in a country that is not secured. Not only that, the lives of people are not secured also. Look at what happened a few days ago in Nanapraste, some people working with the US Embassy. We are killed, not only in Bedouin Bonds. That shows you level at which we have degenerated in this country and it's not something to smile about. It is. The word you use degenerated, you know, I remember the one of Platus State touches me personally because Platus State is, is, is not, used to be known as a home of peace and terrorism. And then suddenly from nowhere, that peace was stolen from them and that state just got violated to the point where we're having what we're having today, where you have hundreds, hundreds of Plattey Indians killed on a daily basis. It is so unfortunate. And we do hope that the incoming government will take the issue of security as something very paramount. Hit the ground running with it. All right. So let's move to the nation newspaper. Above the masthead, you have Sirica. More heads to roll in aviation agencies. Yes, more heads to roll. But I thought that that of Sirica would have been the best to go. That's what I'm concerned, because this was a man that promised when to United Kingdom with so much power wasted our money, hard-end currency, Naira pounds and dollars to, to launch a moribund in Nigeria. Spent so much money at that point. I think at that point you were saying that it's going to have a three million dollars of pounds just putting together the launch of the Naira. Now he's living, he's just about five days and he's living and he has not put, there's no single, he told us that this, this airline will fly. Nothing on ground to show. Even the, even the parts signed with the Ethiopia island is not taking off. Although they have some challenges, especially in court with a local airline operator, but he has not been able to do what he ought to have done. Me, on that aspect, it's a total failure. So he was talking about heads going to, I thought that he's would have been the first to lose, so that all that, because when the head is rotten, every part of the body is going to be affected. So just dismissing the, the chief executives in the various agencies of the evacuous lease sector is not a, they're not on best. Consensus, yes, I know that they're making some progress, but we can also take it away that we're able to make some progress in the area of the, of lifting the, the period, some key airports in Nigeria that I recommend this government. They took up from where the good, large and natural problems started, they started it. And most of our airports, we can say, well, they look like what serious international standard go to that of beggars and some other, this government to larger systems have done, but the minus here, since we're talking about the minister, this is inability to be able to be, to be Nigerians promise of giving Nigeria a national career, that in this service. So I, I hope that in coming, well, it's not just repeating us a national career, let it not be what it was, do the Nigeria aways days, Nigeria aways at a point, largest effort in the world of Africa. In fact, it's really different. So many other countries came here to understand how we did it. But within years, we were able to figure that we just have to have done with so many other sectors. And, and part of it was because government itself killed that sector. You see somebody director or a government official going to London on a weekly, a weekend business with their girlfriends and families and not paying a face. That's a part of what killed Nigeria aways. But I hope that we'll be able to get because it's a team of pride that we have a national airline, national carrier. Yes, national carrier is a team of pride. All right, so let's move to the daily trust. Right at the bottom, we have Airuphai deposes two monarchs, district head. Well, you know, as much as I want to talk about Airuphai, I don't think there's anything much to talk about. Airuphai is going to say something. If you like, you can dispose of it. Yes, there. My own may concern here is looking at this. The culturally yesterday, that is of much interest to me. We are the issue of live broadcasts for presidential election petition court was rejected by the court and the court gave its reasons. I know as a person, I know that it's very difficult for that tribunal or the country to see to that for several reasons. And from that of security, so that we don't talk about the country to a jamboree, which is not an up to panel, as most people have tried to say. It will be difficult for the tribunal judges of the tribunal to do their job in such a manner because there are a lot of drama and the likes and also the security of lives of those involved, especially key witnesses. But that is what Nigerians would have loved to see. Most Nigerians were for that because they want to see the transparency in the job of the tribunal to be able to measure that everything. But I would also say that they shouldn't be worried because we are having journalists, we have our colleagues attending those tribunals and on a daily basis, they would be giving us back, would give us feedback from the tribunal. So it wouldn't be much of a problem. So the tribunal came up yesterday that we do not be able to allow that. How that is going to affect the perception is analytic. But it is not Nigerians that are trying for me is the court and the judiciary that is on trial and ability to be able to redeem themselves with some of the negative impact and negative connotations by Nigerians. And some of the things that I feel about the Nigerian judiciary, this is the time for the Nigerian judiciary to be able to redeem itself. And I hope that a lot will be done. Don't forget also, I think that today or the three days time, the Supreme Court is going to give a judgment on a pre-election matter. So people let it not be confused. People feel that is an example of a judgment on the election. No, it is not an election. It is a pre-election matter. Determined by a suit by Antiqua Mubaka on the legibility of the president's elect to contest the 2023 presidential election. That is what the Supreme Court is going to determine and go to the judgment of not the only election itself so that people don't get it. Pre-election matters to the main hearings, the main matters go. Yeah, pre-election matters, that is it. Yeah, when are we moving from pre-election to the main matters on ground? The main matters is what is already ongoing. All the people involved, both from the Labour Party, the HPC and the BDP have already forwarded their petitions and defence. The court in itself, part of that is what happened yesterday when you hear that we are the five judges of that panel, of that court, came out with the ruling. Now that they are through with the ruling and the life telecasts, then the issue is on the ground. They fit the ground around it. Don't forget that they have a time frame. It is 180 days. And yes, 180 days. And a judgment must be given within the next 180 days. That's what they have. The time frame, they have to get it back. So we are looking forward to that. Okay, let's… That now we're standing. We also have to note that the president-elect will be sworn in on Monday the 29th of May 2023. There is no going back on that. It has nothing to do with the petition if you are the tribunal court. Even at the end of it all, the tribunal in Switzerland said that nobody will be in the election or when I'm good. But that cannot be… You can rest assured that that will not be done by the 29th of May, which is next week on the 20th, when the president-elect will be sworn in. What about this Supreme Court that's supposed to decide on this anti-Tunibu suit today? What do we know about that, Chris? Yes, you know the beauty of law is that everybody tries to get a piece of the cake. And when the election finished, I made a joke on social media. I said the party agents have taken their own. The agrarians have done job. Most of the voters have collected their own. The A's have collected. Now the election has gone. It is now time for us, both of us, that are in the judiciary to take our own piece of cake. And that is what is happening. So all sorts of petition is coming here and there. I know that a lot of people are coming up also just to make sure that the president-elect is not sworn in on the 29th of May. So there are a lot of petition. I know that once somebody finds a suit, but the fact remains that I don't see that happening because you cannot put something on nothing. Already there is an election petition court that is in place. And I don't see a Supreme Court try to annul or try to put aside job of that which don't forget that that tribunal is also a child of law. And it was the Supreme Court that put the decision that put together all the tribunals. So let's wait and see what the Supreme Court is going to say. But I can rest assured that you can take that to the panel. May 29 is sacrosanct. All right, let's still look at something on the punch newspaper. Going down, you have governor's elect protests as outgoing governors, shown transition panels. That is how we roll. This is not the first time. Even the established democracies, when you forget what happened between Joe Biden and former president, what's his name of U.S.? Trump. Donald Trump. Donald Trump did not even hand over a single paper to push. But the fact is that it's supposed to be a seamless exercise because government is a continuum and that's what it ought to be. And governors at every level that's supposed to have a transition to work with the incoming, the outgoing is supposed to work with him. But I don't know why that is not, especially in states where you have governors having their so-called quote-unquote selected or anointed sons taking over. It may just be between those, yes, those that where you have opposition parties taking over and rest of them. But that is what it is. But the fact remains that whether they are part of the transition or transmission on 29th of May, about 22 new governors will take over in Nigeria. That one is also sacrosanct. I like the way you use sacrosanct. That is sacrosanct. 23 new governors will be strong in the 29th of May. But what will happen after that, it is what we don't understand. The fact is that there's going to be a lot of policy came. Even the so-called governors that were anointed or appointed or selected by certain governors who won the election, we can rest assured that we need the next few months they're going to call that. Go and check through this history. It has always happened. It happened in Kanu, it happened in Nigeria, it happened so many things in the past. So the fact that you got anointed or appointed or nominated somebody as your successor does not necessarily mean that the person is going to throw the line. When they get in there, they become a man of their own and you will see what happens. So that would always say that it is right to give Nigeria the opportunity to say elect who they want to be, not just this elective system, but five, six days to go. This is a governor who will be sworn in and they will hit the ground running. So if they are former governors who are not part of this team, that is not a problem. It can also be a rest assured that EFCC will be grabbed by some of them. EFCC already have their. They have written all of them. And Matawale is very, very, yes. They are part done pile on top of EFCC. Some people go chop brick fat, some people go chop brick fat. And they are also ready to fight back. Matawale is also pointing at the EFCC that they have evidence that, you know. Yeah, that demand, that demand. A power is not cleaned too. Yeah, what did he have to say? The man chops a billion in Naira. The man is accusing Matawale, accusing the EFCC of trying to collect two million dollars. But after metering tonight, we will see who will cry first. So let's see who will cry first. It's interesting the things playing out. Well, let's look at this issue of Sudan crisis. I was shocked to see Sudan crisis Nigerian pilgrims to pay a hundred dollars airfare hike. What's that about, Chris? I think probably has to do with fly schedules. You know, Sudan is very, very close to Saudi Arabia maker. Most of them are not. Most of the flights I believe passes through Sudan and cartoon. They fly over, but the situation of things on ground, I don't know whether it is safe for most of them to fly through cartoon, pass through cartoon airspace for security reasons. So what that means that is probably that this airline might take a longer route. That is my personal opinion. I have no idea. That's my personal opinion. So that could be the reason for the rise in extra 100 dollars for pilgrims going to Saudi Arabia because of the crisis. Don't forget also that it is unnoticed that 25 percent of one foot of Sudanese are Nigerians. I'm sure you may be here and there for that. They are Nigerians. Yes, yes, yes. They are Nigerians. They are Nigerians. Yes, about 25 percent of Nigerians are Nigerians of Nigerian origin because of the closeness of Sudan to the maker and the Saudi Arabia. What was that? Most Nigerians pass through Sudan to go for Hajj. After Hajj on their way back, most of them settle down. They settle back in Sudan. They don't come back to Nigeria. So that is why you have here. That's why you have a large number of those that are settled there. So they have children, they have families raised and rest of them. These are these cases. I've made some of them. That's why we are talking about when we talk as say, let me say they want to move 5000 Nigerians together. And the question I've always asked, what of the other Nigerians that are there? It's not just only states that are Nigerians. There are so many Nigerians in Sudan who are doing legitimate work. So at a point, it was also said that Sudan has the highest number of Nigerians in the diaspora. Some people have been saying it was U.S., it was U.K. No. Research has shown that it's Sudan. So there is a highly concentration of Nigerians because of that connection with Sudan, because of the cultural as well as the religious link with Sudan. That is why you have that high number of Nigerians, some that have even forgotten about Nigeria and now are Sudanese nationalists. So the high, the high thing that I'm probably unregistered, probably unregistered. Don't document it. Of course, so many of them are. It's not only this. Most Nigerians when they travel, they don't go to the buses to register their presence. United Kingdom invests in, uh, maybe it's it only when they have problem that they remember to have an embassy. And that has always been the problem. I think that the issues, the minister of foreign affairs, as well as the, uh, need to come. They have to look at the henceforth, a ability to be able to make sure that all Nigerians wherever they are are well documented so that if they find themselves in this kind of crisis, that is also part of the problem where we cannot plan. Now we have crisis during crisis period. We cannot plan because we don't even know how many people are going to plan for that in this is an issue. Most Nigerians also, uh, I know that a lot of Nigerians get to do this country's legitimate. Don't, don't, don't take that away. But there are also so many that go there illegitimates and that is why they keep away from being themselves available and trying to register themselves with relevant authorities. Uh, that's the problem. All right, Chris, before we go, let's take a look at the story on the Guardian newspaper Relief for Travellers as Buhari Commission Second Niger Bridge today. You know, I said I won't touch me now. I say no reason. If you don't talk, I could talk. It is a very serious one. I was excited when I saw the headline. Yeah. To me, it's very exciting and for long way from the start is happening. Talking about the need for Second Niger Bridge and finally we got it. If there's going to be any legacy, one of the legacy is Second Niger Bridge. So many successive governments in the past have used that as a bait for us. Those are, of course, for the SARTES. Vote for us against Second Niger Bridge. I see it is a favor you are doing. I see the SARTES is not part of my deal. But good enough. Yes, it's true because if you continue telling me, oh vote for us, I will give you Second Niger Bridge. I will not ask you how many times is that good for you to give Legos to get it. They won the long bridge in Lokoja. How many times do you say they should vote for you to get that long bridge between Lokoja and Abuja? So that should be in the misbet. The fact is that finally the Second Niger Bridge is coming on stream. It is going to ease the movement in between the south-south, the south-east, the south-west and so many other parts of the country licking up. So it is a good development and I commend the government for this. And I hope that this will not ease up. The Ninjab Bridge, that particular First Niger Bridge has been there close to 40 or 50 years, over 50 years now. And I don't know how it has maybe to maintain that. But the new Second Niger Bridge is of traffic that is perennial along that from especially between Aba, the south-east and the south-east. So we commend the president for the kind gesture as a parting gift. Perhaps one of the good things one of the good things that will be said about the outgoing administration because as this administration is winding down a lot of people have it's received lots of knocks in regards to the economy, with regards to security, with regards to virtually almost every sector. Lots of people are saying differences. How would you score this administration of President Mohammad Ibohari as the leave office in a few days time? What would be your score? What would be your assessment? If I do, you will not forgive me. So let me... No, I don't need to be the judge of that. No, let me say this. Personally, if I put it this office, the promises that I made in 2015 by the president, then I'm going to score this government I just said that in the sense don't forget it has its challenges. How many percent did you say? I said three zero, three zero, three zero because I used just three critical areas. One, we'll talk about the petrol sector, the energy sector, which he promised that it's going to be all refineries or so on a yearly basis. None was built. He told Promise Nigeria that it's going to give us 10,000 megawatts every year. Within 80 years, we're expecting 18 megawatts. We're still running at 4,000 megawatts. So that's zero. He's talking about employment. He promised Nigeria that it's going to add about it. So on 5 million employment within the same every year that has not been achieved. Then you also look at our poverty. Nigeria has moved from those under poverty line from I don't know about 80 million or 70 million then to about 113 million. So if I use those indices to be able to score, then it's total failure. It's also a security area. It didn't do well as far as I'm concerned. Then a change, look at the economy. What was the Naira to the dollar when it came in? How much is it now? Infrastructure? Yes, I've done so. I've talked about that of Nigeria. In Lagos Ibadon expressway, I will score him very well. If I'm going to use that to score, I'll score him over 80 percent. That expressway is just between OPEC and Bega that is remaining. If you take a drive, I tell you that I did in Lagos Ibadon for four years when I went for my law program. You can make Lagos Ibadon from the Ibadon end up to up to some point in Lagos under one hour now. It wasn't like that before. So on that aspect, I'm telling you that it did very well. So there are some areas so it will be difficult for you to score into that segment in some of the situation. If I were to submit, as I've said, a certain key area he built, but he has also tried his service and government is a continuum. Where do you want to mark his script after he must have left office? And I hope that will be kind enough to him and his government. Chris Kendewando, always a delight to have you on Off the Press. Thank you so much for your time and insight today. Thank you very much and a happy belated birthday to you once again. Thank you Chris. Thank you Chris, I appreciate that. Chris Kendewando, member of the Chartered Institute of Abitrators in the UK, has joined us from Lagos on Off the Press this morning on Technophile Tuesday edition of The Breakfast. We'll take a break to give you the weather report. Do stay with us as we return after that with our very first hot topic of the day.