 Well, over the years, disasters of various magnitude are becoming more frequent, intense and geographically diverse in various communities across Lagos and Nigeria at large. Plus, TV Africa's Ngoziqa Gohachesi spoke with the former general manager of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, La Sima, Timiu Adishino, who said the federal government should invest heavily in disaster management structure. He also advocated that governments should educate Nigerians more about disasters. Do not have a robust plan. We may not achieve results, and then there must be national policy to educate Nigerians. Today in America, if emergency occurs, an average American knows what to do. Look, if you are working within a neighborhood, and a boy as young as seven years sight you and see a gun in your pocket, he knows he is trained not to scream or not to shout because he knows you could shoot him. He knows how to crawl back, go in and pick the family phone and call 911. We must begin to do that. We must begin to let people know that when they see something, they should say something. Because if we don't do that, and the calamity happens, even you that saw it and didn't raise a lamp, you may even be the biggest victim. So it's clear from all of this that, yes, government's investment in providing safety for its citizens is not a bad one. We must have, like you have MAMSA. I don't know what they call them to the national orientation agency. They should be saddled with the responsibility of talking to Nigerians, apart from their civic responsibilities. There must also be a concerted effort to let Nigerians know what to do when you notice anything going forward.