 Now, Labour Party presidential candidates, Peter Obeys, insist that that President Balaton and Buo O's nitrogen is the moral duty to personally clarify the circumstances around the Chicago State University credentials. He declared that any leader who chooses or chooses to serve the country must earn public trust and obey the rule of law, as enshrined in the nation's constitution. The former governor of Adonabra State made the demand shortly after paying tribute to the late former Minister of Internal Affairs during the Second Republic, Bello Youssef, Mitama and Kano. Leaders must earn public trust, and if you choose to serve the public, you always avail yourself to explain to the public when there's issue of dispute. And you must do so personally. You can't assert it because it's about you. And it's you that people voted for. The country must be built on character, integrity, trust. That is the foundation and obeying the rule of law. We have a law. So if the law requires you to do this, under the dispute, you come and clarify it personally. And that's for me, that is what it's for.