 As part of the monthly intervention series, the African Leadership Group has asked Nigerians to actively engage their leaders by demanding accountability in governance. The host pastor, Itwa Igodalo, and other speakers highlighted many challenges in pedding development and pro-fa solutions. Plus TV Africa Senior Correspondent Kaya Delayndi reports. Different interventions ranging from constitutional framework, youth and women participation in governance and politics are highlighted by the speakers. In his remark, Yemi Kandy Johnson, a senior advocate of Nigeria, argues that the constitution is tilted to enthrone corruption and autocracy. If you maintain a system which perpetrates injustice, which sponsors corruption, which is unaccountable to the people because of its distance from them and its understanding for them, and this is the arrangement we have in Nigeria, and the creation of our constitutional arrangements in my opinion today is that it has been organized to sanction kleptocracy, incompetence, corruption, and in many regards, outright theft. Railing out what he described as unjust statistics, Farouk Abar says youth must be consciously engrafted into governance if real change must occur. Likewise, Aisha Vaazoum hinted on the important role of women. Nigeria, we can say, is not a society based on justice. If you look at the statistics of voters' registration in Nigeria, you find that voters below 35 years old constitute 51% of the total voters in Nigeria, and voters below 50. If you add the voters below 50 and the voters below 35 years old, it gives us a total of 81% of the voters in Nigeria. Then when you look at the leadership structure in Nigeria, both at the National Assembly and at the executive level governors and look at government chairmen, you see that the percentage of leadership, if you look at 18 to 35, they are almost non-represented. They are almost non-represented. So when you have the bulk of your population not participating in governance or in leadership, you are bound to have problems. We may have to see the symbols. We may have to take them and take them along with all this shit. Let all of us break the executive standard. We need more men in governance. We need more governance. We need more governance. We need more when the president's vice-president's money says every decision making is critical. In his intervention, the host and senior pastor of Trinity House, Itua Igudalo, accuses the president of docility in addressing the security challenges. Let me say it bold, loud and clear. The problem of insecurity in Nigeria lies on the table of Mohamedu Buhari. If Mohamedu Buhari is ready today to stop all this insecurity, he has the power, he has the ability, and he knows what to do. You can read my lips. He knows what to do. The reason why he's not doing it, I don't really understand. A complaint that the government in power is not taking advantage of technology and fighting insecurity. How can you capture 257 girls and we don't know where they are? It's not possible in this day and age with technology and everything. Do you know the amount of effort it takes to move 250 people across a certain place and nobody saw them and you can't find them and they disappear? And they say this girl, Mia Sharibu, she's captured, she's having babies every year and you can't find her. What does that mean? What nonsense is that? So she commentators say this should not be treated as a mere talk show. Rather, deliberate steps must be taken to address issues raised. Carry the ladder in the plots TV Africa.