 The Big Ten group in the Labour Party embarked on an advocacy walk in the federal capital territory to encourage the collection of permanent voters' curts by citizens. Members of the group moved from the Unity Fountain to the INIC headquarters. The peaceful demonstration was led by Pat Atomi, a professor of political economy, and Tanko Yinuse from a national chairman of the National Conscience Party. Today we want to participate in a democratic exercise. An exercise of expressing our views in freedom to the people, women, and electoral commission. And to say to them that they have the possibility of having their names crafted in gold for all of posterity. If they would only give everything they have to ensure, one, that all of those who have registered to vote receive their PVCs. Secondly, to understand that the process that they have embarked on is a biometric process. In fact, you should not need your PVC to vote because you have been captured. Your biometrics are in the system. If you show up on election day without any PVC, by the time your fingerprints are seen, your face is seen, automatically you should be able to say you are the person who registered. And so we are saying to the leaders of INIC today and we'll present them a formal letter. It is time to make democracy work for Nigerians. We have demands and we have requests by the Nigerian youths, the agents, the Nigerian women, the Nigerian under-children who are demanding that they have come out in large numbers to register for the election in 2023. And so, therefore, they are requesting and demanding that their PVC will be made available to them to enable them to exercise their franchise. Anything short of that is totally unacceptable.