 And Nigeria's campaign to end open defecation by 2025 may fail if governments at all level refuse to be proactive in their approach. According to the District Governor of Rotary Club District 9110 Remy Bello, while addressing newsmen in a bucata recently, the country is not working the action and plans it launched in 2016 against open defecation. He says one in four Nigerians, about 47 million people, practice open defecation and, according to the World Health Organization and UNICEF, joins monitoring reports. A Nigerian government must immediately embark on decisive mission, eliminate open defecation nationwide. We know that the government has 2025 as a target beat to bring open defecation to an end. There is what is called a roadmap, but our own study says that it's not likely to come to a hand by 2025. So Rotary is working on a five-year program. Probably the statistics we are having now, we are there talking of about 70% open defecation in our schools, about 90% in public health centers. Probably it's because of the little people like us are doing that, need that, you know what it is now. So government must take X sectors as a priority and declare what I call an imagination within the sector so that we can actually change the paradigm. COVID-19 has actually shown the implication of the weaknesses of the government and I don't realize that we must strengthen its institution.