 And we're back to the breakfast in Plasti, the Africa. We're going back in time now and I'm going to 1968. On this day in history, what happened was the only successful hijacking of a plane. It was the El Pal airplane in Israel. It was an Israeli plane that had 38 passengers and 10 crew members. This LL aircraft was actually moving from Rome to Israel. And the unfortunate thing was that there were three hijackers on the aircraft and they were members of the Popular Fronts for the Liberation of Palestine, PFLP. Now these hijackers, let me give you a bit of a story. So the pilots actually requested for coffee. So while the door was opened, they simply went in, they used the butt of the gun or the pistol to hit one of the pilots and they ordered him to divert the plane from Rome to Israel to divert it to Algeria. And the plane landed in Algeria, it was then grounded. What happened was that the authorities there in Algeria basically got every non-Israeli passenger and took them aboard and air France. But every Israeli passenger remained on board. Negotiations lasted for 40 days. The good thing is that no one was hurt, there was no fatality. But these people were carefully chosen. It was a pilot, it was a karate fighter and a cook. So they basically planned to stay as long as they could to get whatever they wanted. But the good thing is that nobody was hurt. And they basically didn't achieve their final aim at the end of the day. And this LL Flight 707 has played an important role in humanitarian rescue efforts. And now they've been eliciting Jews from other countries to Israel. And they basically set a world record for the most passengers on a commercial aircraft. I think they achieved their aim or some part of their aim. The negotiations ended with about 16 Arab conflicts released. So that I believe was one of the reasons they carried out the hijacking in the first place. Maybe one of the reasons, maybe the only reason why they carried out the hijacking. Unfortunately, the story doesn't share what happened to them if they eventually were arrested or sent to jail or they were released. It ends by saying that they were freed along with the other passengers. But yeah, that's on LL. Let's go back to 2015 now and talk a little bit about the Me Too movement. And somebody who was released a couple of weeks ago, I believe, Bill Cosby. Yes, June 30. You remember there was a court ruling and George actually set him free because he had an agreement with the case from a couple of years earlier that meant that he could not be prosecuted for that case again. But it was on this day in 2015 that a court disallowed his trying to, let's see what it says. It says they rejected his petition to go against a civil case on his alleged sexual assault of a 15-year-old girl at a Playboy mansion in 1974. The California Supreme Court rejected that petition. And of course he failed to block a civil case on this day. In his testimony, he admitted to casual sex involved in the recreational use of a particular sedative, popularly known as Caludis, with a series of young women. He also acknowledged that his dispensing of the prescription drug was illegal. He maintained his innocence and repeatedly denied the allegations made against him from this case and then all the cases. And his first trial on the 2nd of June in 2015 ended in a mistrial. And of course he eventually was sentenced to jail until he was eventually set free on the 30th of June 2021. But that of course is the story of Bill Cosby. And like I said, no matter how beautiful and illustrious your career is, one single mistake that you make in the course of enjoying your career can eventually ruin all you've worked for for 40 years or even more. But I really don't know how the meeting movement would see this. Would they see this as, oh, he finally got some jail time at the end of the day. So this was a victory for us. Or would they say, well, at the end of the day, the court is now saying his due process was violated and it wasn't exactly a victory at the end of the day. I really don't know how they interpret the fact that Bill Cosby is now a free man. But it is what it is. He's been released and he's back home. It is what it is. Absolutely. All right, that's it 2015 and 1968. Yes, today in history. Take a short break when we come back. Our first major conversation for today, Nigerians in diaspora. How many are they really? And of course, the programs that are going to be running in Nigeria in the next couple of days trying to improve on the narrative concern in Nigerians in diaspora. We'll talk about that after the short break.