 The Nigerian senator on Tuesday became rowdy during the screening of one of the ministerial nominees, Nasir Erufai, where Senator Sunday Karimi submitted a petition against the nominee. His brief remarks Karimi drew the attention of members to the petition, which he said bordered on security, quesitiveness and unity. And I think that petition asked to be considered along in this screening exercise. Deputy Sen. President Baral Gibrin, who was presiding, received the documents from the lawmaker but when the Sen. President Gosselakbabi returned to his seat, he cautioned their search matters bordered on security and therefore should not be considered by the Senate. The argument did not stand as the former governor chose to respond to some of the questions asked. The income per capita, the GDP per capita of Nigeria. By Your Excellency, even if we are able to generate 13,000 megawatts today, our transmission infrastructure can only do 5,000, maybe 6,000 at best. So one, the second major constraint to electricity supply in Nigeria is the transmission infrastructure. We need to close the loop in our transmission system so that the 13 system collapses we had in 2022 are not repeated again in our history. And this can be done. There is money to expand the transmission infrastructure. We just need to organize ourselves, remove politics from transmission procurement and focus on improving our transmission infrastructure. His rolling prize in the House of Sen. Gosselakbabi, who refused to take the petition, said a number of petitions were submitted against a number of the ministerial nominees. In a similar development, Wale Adumai, ministerial nominee from Oregon State, spoke on his performance with the leaders. He stated that the deployment of technology was done ruthlessly. The income per capita, the GDP per capita of Nigeria was higher than that of China as recently as 1990. Today, Chinese per capita income is $13,000 nearly. Nigeria is just over $2,000. So you can see the gap that has opened up. And the reason why was that production growth was stalled by insecurity, by inflation and by wasteful government expenditure to a large extent. However, in the last two months there really has been a turnaround in the Nigerian economy which is room for tremendous optimism.