 We're glad to know you're still there. It's still the breakfast on Floss TV Africa. Right now, we're going to talk about a collapsed grid successfully restored. That is according to TCM, the transmission company of Nigeria. It said it has fully restored the national electricity grid, which collapsed in the early hours of Monday. This was announced by the TCM general manager, Public Affairs, DD, back in a statement. Monday afternoon, this makes it the sixth time the power grid collapsed in 2024. TCM reaffirms its commitment to enhancing the resilience and reliability of the national grid and pledges to continue investigating the measures aimed at strengthening the grid's infrastructure. And to discuss this is Dr. Sam Amadi, former chairman of the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission, NEG. Good morning and welcome to the program, sir. Hello. Good morning. Thank you. Yes. We're getting worried every day. We hear about the collapse of the national grid and all that. It has been restored now, but restoration means only collapse in waiting. So we're concerned about that in the 21st century and with the population of more than 200 million people in Nigeria. We're just like you to quickly walk us through why this collapse happens all the time and what needs to be done to make sure that it doesn't happen again. We are short of time. That's why I'm just putting all the questions together. So why does it happen and what can be done about it? Well, I have a lot of issues, of course, but it can come from some of the increase in social security for many years, in upgraded and now working and so that they did that, so it's something that works. I think the network seems to be bad, is unfortunate, maybe we'll just have another time and have a conversation about this because we need proper infrastructure, we need something that is sustainable, not collapse today, collapse tomorrow, collapse next tomorrow, or we'll fix it, we have power now. And then in a few days again or a few weeks, we see this is the sixth time in 2024 and this is just April, we just finished the first quarter. How do we have a grid that keeps collapsing every other week? I'm very sure that there are things that can be done, but corruption has a deep and nobody cares. And people take for granted, people are not even active enough to make sure that the people who do things wrongly and suffer it, like someone said, if there is consequences for bad behavior and people are seen to get those consequences for bad behavior, other people will sit up, but there's no consequence for bad behavior. And sometimes we just take for granted things that we think, okay, it is a bad thing, but it's not that bad and we let it go. For instance, the banks tell you that they do 24-7 service and then you go to the bank every weekend, you don't have money on the ATM, every public holiday you don't have money and the POS is operating very close, nobody is talking to the banks, you go to your service provider, you make a call, this is funny, you make a call and they're telling you sometimes in place of the ringtone, something will be like on this day in 2020 this and that, this, this, this happened, you will hear that same sound maybe for like a month. On this day, what if someone is going for an exam and he hears that and he goes to write it, he fails, it is your fault. What if you are having a discussion that is supposed to be an intelligent discussion and you feel that you've heard, you've had information and then you use it and then you get embarrassed. There are people who can commit suicide because of embarrassment and you're letting those things happen, nobody is talking about it so you can deceive us all the time that you want and no consequences at all. So we take for granted a lot of things that happen here and there is no consequence for bad behavior and so people just do whatever they want to do. I think in Indonesia or one of these countries, someone is going to face death because of fraud but in Nigeria, we celebrate the big men. You have money, you understand and that's not how we're supposed to be. If we want a system that works, then our justice system needs to do everything that they can to ensure that we're good, to ensure that people do not commit crimes and then they're being rewarded instead of facing the music instead of going to jail, instead of being persecuted for it. But we're being rewarded. We're saying we clap for them, we clap for corruption. Corruption has eaten deeply in our nation and we need to start to just curb it in totality. That's why I applaud the courage of the Ganduji Award, where eventually Ganduji, the APC chairman comes from, because he's facing this allegation in the state that the Gandula thing and all that, here he's been suspended. And he took a lot of courage for a award to suspend the national chairman of the party in a award that bears his name. So I think that was very courageous. And we hope that he will answer to whatever, whether they were crimes or not. If he comes out clean, fine. If he's found guilty, then he should go in for it. So I commend that as well. Yeah, anyway, second back to the topic, which is about the power grid. I mean, I just hope that whatever infrastructure they need to put in place is being put in place. Corruption is out of the way. And then we can just have a better electricity grid that is not collapsing and that South Africans are not laughing at us. Police, please arrest them all the time. After all, now the Chinobu administration is declaring the last day of the first week of every April as police day. They will have police week and then the end of that week will be police day. So maybe there will be improved services from the police. Well, we'll see about that. All right. That's it for the show today. It was lovely having the breakfast with you. Thank you. We'll see you again tomorrow. My name is Rume Paul Singh. And I am Nyamgul Agaji. Tomorrow will be another very good day to meet. Bye for now. Bye.