 And welcome back to the Breakfast and Plus TV Africa. Now let's talk 2023. Just before we took the break, I had mentioned the Muslim rights concern has stated that it will only support a Yoruba Muslim candidate for 2023 and no one else. We are speaking this morning with Professor Ishaq Akintola, who is the director of MURIK. Thanks for joining us, Professor Akintola. Okay, you're welcome. Alright, so let's get some clarification as to what exactly MURIK is saying. It is Yoruba Muslim or no one else. Why exactly is that the stand of MURIK? Okay, do I go ahead? Yes, go ahead please. Good. For the past 20 years, in 2016, no one Yoruba Muslim has been elected as the president of the country. Yoruba has led the country, but with all the group, we had the next president, he was military head of state for three or four years. Again, he was civilian president for 18 years, from 1990 to 2007. Of course, the passenger is Yoruba or passenger in MURIK to say name. Yoruba was elected as the president of MURIK in November 1993, before General Tunia passed. Today, Yoruba has advised, but it's also that professor, they have nothing, they have the right to be there. And we are giving them support. But the Yoruba in the south-west is still only looking back then. And in the near future, it is good. They are forced to move their cars at the, which is important to the Muslim. In Britain, girls are not allowed to drive at the gas. We cannot. In the near future, Yoruba's people, they are forced to move their cars at the gas station. They are forced to move their cars at the gas station. And the Yoruba, the Yoruba, the Yoruba, the Yoruba, the Yoruba, the Yoruba, by many people's spectrum you can wear it here to the third way. You know how this is working? And now the path that we are in, but the reality is that life is denied. It is not easy. Political appointment. For Christians, for the whole thing. As for things that are permissible. But things are Christian. Most of the companies in the country have majority members of the government. Majority of both. You provide a fast-talk when you can vote again. All right. Prophets, I can tell that. Yes. I just wanted to ask because we may not have that much time to have this discussion. We may have to continue it very likely tomorrow morning. But I want to ask also. Merrick is talking about Yoruba Muslim. Is Merrick also open to supporting a Muslim from any other part of the country that also can argue that hasn't had any opportunities and any fair share of governance? A Muslim from the South-South, from a those state maybe. Maybe from the South-East. Is Merrick also open to supporting any of those persons? Well, our contention is this. The Muslim rights of some people as a human rights organization will not support the Christian, the president of Moldova. Any part of the country. So, you know, they don't support that being a government. Or a natural. With the Muslims in Yoruba land, we are going in for a Muslim president from the South-South. It means that the U.S. has got a president from what? There is no U.S. president that can debate. We want to speak with no U.S. president that can debate. It is important to speak with a Muslim. If you speak with your purpose to the oproxial, that is the anti-Muslim, that is our government, we are going for an international passport. And it goes there. It goes there in reality. And it is told, this is not allowed. You have to remove the ban. You have to take the ban. If you don't take the ban, you have to take the ban. I hear your concerns, and of course I've also read the message from Murico before, but I think these are things that we would have a full discussion on. Sadly, we would have to let it go here and reschedule this conversation to break these things down, you know, properly and get you to, you know, share your views on these concerns, you know, more comfortably. But thank you for the time that you shared with us this morning. We'll have a rescheduled conversation and we wish you a very beautiful Tuesday ahead. All right. Well, Mirig once again says they, of course, are seeking a Muslim president, but not just a Muslim president, a Muslim, a Yoruba Muslim president in 2023. This conversation will be continued tomorrow and we'll have more time and have an extensive discussion, you know, on it. Coming up next, we're moving to the southeast to talk about the IPOB and the Anambra governorship elections and that comes up next here on The Breakfast.