 All right, you're still watching Waze. Now, International Peace Day is celebrated annually on the 21st of September. It is a day to promote peace and non-violence around the world. The theme for International Peace Day 2023 is Action for Peace, our ambition for the hashtag global goals. Now, this theme recognizes the interconnectedness of peace and sustainable development. It also calls on anyone to take action to build a more peaceful world. OK, so I mean, today is a very interesting day. A lot of people are doing so many peace walks and all of that. So it's just an apt season. It's very sad, honestly. It's very sad. I think maybe what is saddening me is the fact that I just watched the video of the dead body that was being exhumed and seen I think that's what is that. And now I can trace it. So literally, I've been seeing the video all day, but I just scroll past it. Because actually, most of my day, I've been reading. I've been studying. So a few times that I went on social media just to check what's happening so that we could discuss our topic for the day. I saw something around, oh, body has been exhumed. I never clicked on it. So when I was having my makeup done, I clicked on it and I saw fresh blood. Like, literally, is there anything in this life that would make me resolve to say maybe the ultimate price death? Like, everything can be peacefully resolved, as far as I'm concerned. Yeah, I mean, how bad could it be that you? Why was he rushed? Why did he rush to bury him? It's a long story to talk about. I think it's just a downer for me. What did you find? I'm happy about how people are speaking up. I passed through the OZumba while they were doing the protests. And I was happy to see that. I don't think the generation before this would even have the courage to say anything or even challenge. I mean, the Malian music as a whole, I think they're pretty much very big. And to be able to challenge them, to be able to say you want to cancel their music, I mean, say they force. We're gradually waking up that, yes, our voice matters. It will be hard, and it will take time, but we're going to keep pushing. And so peaceful for that. Yes, peacefully. Absolutely. So what did you find first? It was a signal, bad story. Shinga Devido made an appearance at the protest, which is very much interesting. I like that the artists are also coming out to support. So it's not just the youth or the listeners of the music. I mean, if the big shots in the industry are showing supports, then definitely I hope and I believe that we will get justice. Or at least some people will be properly apprehended. Yeah, speaking about that, there are so many developing stories. But let me quickly take my story first. And the reason I'm taking it is also tied to, since we're discussing issues around healthcare sector. I have two stories to take. First of all, it's the fact that four people escaped death in Leki Aja Expressway on an auto crash. The incident happened around the Salao Junction area of the Leki Aja Expressway. The reason I'm talking about this particular news is the fact that literally Leki Expressway is a death trap. It's actually inhumane what our leaders are doing to us. Uti went to Benin and she said that at some point the car had to stop. They had to come down and enter our car that she was going for a wedding, that they had to stop because the road was just not motorable. And this bad road, she was even trying to say, we thought we had bad roads in Lagos and go to other parts of the world, I mean parts of the country. So the reason I'm raising this is, I mean, I don't know about other parts, but I've been to Kaduna, I've been to Abuja. Really, would you see really, really bad roads, right? I don't understand. Yeah, there might be those areas where you would have bad roads. Maybe I've not plied those roads. Yeah, where does major access roads should? I'm saying that, you know, generally, I don't think, I feel like our leaders just want to keep us busy with things that we're not supposed to be busy with, I'm doing a course with Harvard and they were talking about how they put a cost to incidences that happened. So they put like, they pinned it down to how much Naira and Kobo was lost in those incidences that happened around the healthcare sector. Just imagine for a second if we're able to put data to some of these things that we go through. Now I've had to be passing an alternate route every single day because once I come out of my house, right, I see like the map telling me that I have a 50-something minutes, what's it called? I know when Google gives you 50-something minutes, expect a three hour, you understand, expect a three hour delay. So it is really, really bad, like literally, I don't know what else we can do to these our leaders. Like, do you literally derive joy in watching people either die on the roads or get stuck and are frustrated? It's just too much. It's like they just want to keep us busy with terrible governance. I don't know what to say. Like, when will it cost us to have roads that are pothole free? When would it cost? So I want to take a quick story that is tied to the conversation that we're having today, which is the fact that the medical, it says the medical postgraduate school of meds, the postgraduate medical college, right? They've decried, what's it called? The lament low enrollment of postgraduate medical students to train, owning to the continued emigration of doctors, right? The reason I'm taking this story again is tied to what we're having today. And from the reports, the speaking on Wednesday at the institution in Janaki Lagos during the pre-convocation press briefing ahead of convocation of over 500 postgraduate doctors. That's today. Oshibogun said that efforts must be made to stem the tides of JAKBA amongst medical doctors. He said that we will be convocating about 430 new fellows and 92 doctors of medicine. We will have over 500 postgraduate doctor conferences on Thursday. And the main challenge we face now is that we do not have enough people to train because as doctors graduate, the syndrome, the JAKBA syndrome, what is generally referred to as brain drain in the country is affecting them. To address that problem, we need to train more and retain more. There are two legs to it. We need to ramp up our training processes and we also need to put into, in place, mainly on the side of government, the mechanism to ensure that skilled manpower remains in the country. There are several ways in which the government can do that. At our last conference, we preferred some solutions as to how we can retain trained manpower through financial and non-financial incentives. I'm taking this story because of the conversation we're having around the healthcare sector. So it's not just enough for us to complain, right? There has to be a structure, and we have to see the willpower of our government to say, yes, we truly want to solve this problem. We'll take a break now when we come back from that break, right? We'll be discussing the issues around the healthcare sector and let's see how we can prefer solutions to them. Stay with us, we'll be right back.