 Worried by the recent attack by unknown gunmen in some parts of Bodo community in Gukana local government area of river state, stakeholders including traditional rulers, security agencies working to foster peaceful coexistence in the state have re-strategized and omitted to improving synergy to strengthen the peace-building process in the community, the report. The traditional institution in Bodo community has administered oaths taken to some youth of the community in order to end killings in the area. Speaking in an interview with journalists, the community development chairman John Val said the process should not be lopsided but advocate for justice in Bodo. From what happened today, people can confirm what I said my fears that the peace process may be lopsided and true to it is. Because if you can observe after the oath taken, today was meant for oath taking and after the oath taken everybody left, some people refused to take the oaths, I don't know what is on their mind why they refused to take the oaths but I still believe that since it is a peace process, it will go smoothly. The former Niger Delta ex-agitator Solomon Ndikbara advised the Bodo community youth to desist from gun battle amongst themselves. I'm sure they are about the youth of Bodo to receive from shooting gun, to be able to identify that this oath is not a joke. Those that take oath will use us to find those that did not take oath, that did not want the peace. I'm not going to live it that way, I'm going to make sure that the peace continues until we finish it. This is a whole talk of peace. Everybody, those who are away and those who are home, there is going to be a kind of unification and in this unification there will be a court of peace whereby on your own running you take the oath that as you are coming in, you are going to live peacefully with your brothers. You are not going to be part of anything that will be detrimental to the development of this community Bodo city. However, our correspondent reports that after the oath taken, King John Barabon appeared for the first time at Town Square, one year after the Bodo crisis to address his people but was later disrupted by youth.