 As 2023 General Elections draws nearer, calls have been made by authorities and various stakeholders on the need for citizens to obtain their permanent photos cards. Visited by plus-TV news to some INEC registration centres in Kano shows that the electorates are experiencing difficulties, despite effort to obtain their peavuses. Residents in Kano are disturbed by the apparent insufficiency of manpower in the conduct of the continuous voter registration exercise in the state ahead of the forthcoming polls. At the INEC headquarters in Kano, residents from various locations troop to either register or obtain their peavuses. However, most of them complain bitterly over the delay in voter registration. Now I'm a Muslim. I suppose to pray morning prayer. After my morning prayer, I keep an assidue and I say, that's why I come to check in here. But one problem is just simple. The INEC people have problem. They don't have a same party for Nigeria's. And God will say, since this is my home, and from Lagos, just to change this thing now to Kano, I've been put it in there. I mean this now. Now this is how I'm achieving it. See, we don't have a problem, but as a patriotic Nigerian, I would say, I would not have to move, because I'm a log. I make a log. Let's get to say that I'm taking 120. Now I spend almost, I mean, almost, almost how much we have to go for 2,000 plus. Just like that. But it shall allow us to come back to work. Once we have this in, even though we don't have this in progress, it's not really what I'd like to make Nigerians, and especially even the traders. Now it will be very flexible for them to get their babies. We know they are crying, but they should add more effort. They should add more effort by making it very easy, so that as soon as you come, you get your own. Because we that are here, we are here, and so many people have not yet got it. So we are here for the union. We are here for the human traders. Impossible. They should know how to do it, so that they can be very, very easy. So many of us have more to do at home. So that is what we have to do. They should try and make more effort. Let's give this to me, the hands of Nigerians. Early this morning, as early as this is, we have to go to Maslan to do this thing. To let our goodness come. So I'm getting to that place. The road thing. After writing the name. At the end of the day, we came back. Because here I'm working, I have to go home to... At least I've written my name. Let me just rush you and freshen up and come back. And get back there. They say that there are a few people that have got it to their limits. So I rush down to this place now. I get to this place. They say, okay, I've got it. I'm not there. I'm home number again. So we have to go home and come back. There are people that have spent a long time going home, coming back, going home, coming back, but they are here to get this hodaskar. Now, this is something that is paramount for every Nigerian to have. Because if you must go to need this, and voting is our right. And if you must exercise our right to need this hodaskar. So, and if some people will get tired, if they keep suffering, they're going to be coming back, going to come back. They are spending transportation, spending their time. So people are like me, I'm working. They cannot permit me to go to my office now to go to the... Maybe tomorrow they permit me, maybe next tomorrow they permit me. I am not working for myself. People have left their businesses for days, coming here every day. They are still pouring in over there. They are saying, I do not have a day. They want to get access. But they say they have gotten it. I don't know why. I think here is their headquarters, if I'm right. They are taking only one 50 minutes. They say that one 50 you take from morning to 6 in the evening. It means that the time is not fast. That's number one. Because even a cyber cafe that has fast network, I don't want to have 50 to 20. Numbers we consider in Canada because we are facing hard times just to collect our PBC, which is our right. We have been pressured by our colleagues to get our PBC, all to know our view. We have children and jobs to do, but we decided to leave them and get our PBC. And we can't seem to get it because INEC said they are only registering 150 people per day. This is not fair because we have sacrificed a lot. In May, INEC stated that 259,503 PBCs were collected in Kano states. Also, a recent statement by the Kano resident commissioner of INEC, Rizkawa Arabi, pointed out that out of 312,000 applicants, 227,000 had completed their registration in the states. Stephen Inok, plus the news, Kano.