 The Youth Party in Nigeria has lamented the federal government's refusal to hold any official accountable for the impetition of 3 million litres of substandard petrol into the country and saying it's unacceptable. Earlier the party's National Publicity Secretary Ayodhya Deo was in our studio. I mean our display of anger is a frustration and irritation that comes from a lack of accountability from public officials who should otherwise know better. I mean we're talking about importing hundred million litres of adulterated petrol into the country that has knocked off engines for cars for generators and yet no one is held to account. It makes absolutely no sense to me. It's been first of all it took three days and public outcry for the NNPC to have the courtesy to issue a public statement when cars were being damaged, when queues were already piling up at the filling stations. They didn't deem it fit to inform Nigerians why there was scarcity or why there was a bad petrol that was knocking car engines. It took the president who doubles as the Minister of Petroleum an extra two three days to issue what for me again you wouldn't even call a very stern statement on the issue that had you know befalling the entire country. The NNPC cannot be on top of its game because it claims that it has enough reserves and then there's still scarcity all over the country and it's important to emphasize this point. The NNPC have also said that they may require to spend 201 billion Naira to clean up the bad petrol 201 billion Naira. As soon as going on strike or they have just gone on strike because the federal government lacks 30 billion Naira to give them for revitalization fund for the universities. There can be no way forward if public officials are no head accountable. So I would argue that the first thing that needs to happen is that people must be punished for costing the country billions of Naira for costing a lot of hardship and for costing damages to the Nigerian people.