 President Tilavu sets out physical policies to tackle economic reality in his speech delivered to the nation. We also will be looking at the power of right communication on the program this morning. Then we'll be looking also at what made it to the front pages of some of our national dailies of the press. Good morning to you and thanks for joining us on the break. My name is Nyam Ghul Aghaji. We sincerely apologize for the little mix-up this morning. Our second topic is going to deal with the right communication, the power of the right communication. We will show the charity aspect of it and bring it on a later date. But today it's going to be a very, very busy day, as it were, because we're hearing some good news and some bad news. Also, when we talk about traffic very early in the morning and very early in the show every day, we hope to bring you some news in that sector. And the good news today is that from today, according to the governor of Cross River State, all BRT buses and cars, whether big or small buses that are operated by the state government will have a price slash of 50%. We saw that happen during the campaigns and immediately after the campaigns everything went up. So places that they were paying for instance 200 Naira went to maybe 300 Naira, some of them 400 Naira and all that. But now everybody began to grumble. So this thing was just for election and the people didn't matter after election. Now that the fuel subsidy has been removed and people are going through a lot of pain, the governor has now said, okay, we're going back to what we did. If it was doable during the campaigns, then it's doable even now. And he said that BRT buses will be taking half the price they used to charge. I don't know how far that's going to take us, whether it's going to take us for six months and they will extend it or it's going to be for life. And I'm asking myself, so what is this called? Is it not subsidy? Now the people who are going to work will be enjoying the slash in price of transportation. What about the people that don't need to go to work, need to trek to somewhere else but are still finding it difficult because everything has gone up because of the subsidy removal. There are some palliatives that go around and there are some that go to specific people. Do we need the ones for specific people or do we need the ones that will go around and everybody will have a feel of it. I'm not saying what the governor did was bad. In fact, I applaud him so much and I'm just hoping that as he has promised that there are going to be more buses, the buses will come very rapidly. They will come very fast. We wouldn't have to wait for a month or two before these buses come. More buses, he promised to the workers, the workers in Alousa and everywhere else, they have the buses that take them but I do hope those buses will come for the workers and for everybody else and then there will be more routes for these buses to ply. For instance, if there is no bus from Begha, or you do Begha to Ajah, maybe they should be thinking about buses that will take people from Begha to Ajah directly without having to go to Oshodi before they take another bus and all that if it is not existing. So open up more routes for these BRT buses to ply, make the time longer so that the buses will have to go earlier and close later. If that is done, then everybody will be happy because in Lagos you need to move very early if you want to beat traffic and everything else. So people who are living for work, maybe by 6 or 5.30, they also enjoy these or will they have to wait till maybe 7 o'clock where the BRT buses will leave the places that they load from before they go to work and go late to work. They are some essential, in fact every essential worker has one or two days that they need to go very early to work. If you are a broadcaster, for instance maybe you have to open the mic at 5.30, you open the station at 5.30 and do your run down and do everything. So you need to go to the office earlier than everybody else or even if you are doing that at 6 o'clock you need to leave your home maybe at 5 o'clock or a little after 5 o'clock. So will these people be covered? Are there arrangements made so that people who are early risers can also benefit from this? And then some people go to work and come back very late. Maybe their shift is such that they will close later than the normal 4.30 or 5 or 6 o'clock as the case may be. Will they still have buses to come home? Because if these buses will not cover this category of people, then a lot of people will be left out of these ledges, I might like to call it, of the state government. So let's just make sure that we dot all the I's and cross the T's and make sure everybody is enjoying from this impressive policy that the governor has brought. Democracy is about the people and if the governor or the government has seen the people are complaining because they really are suffering, then they should look into how they are suffering and who is suffering and why they are suffering and see how they can address all that. So buses come, good, more routes asked for. Longer time, I have also asked for that and a lot of people will be of the same opinion. Let it be longer and then let there be more routes to carry the people and go to work. If I'm coming to work very early, let me be able to have a bus to jump on as well so that I don't get to pay somewhere that people used to pay 300. I keep seeing this 300 from Uduberga to Victoria Island is now 1,000 Naira. So it is not 600 Naira which will be double. It is not even 900 Naira which will be triple, there is still something else. So more than 300% increment of whatever they have been paying or we have been paying. So it's a letable thing let the governor do even more than that. Thank you Mr. Governor for doing that. But we have some things that are top trending. First of all, helicopter crashed into a residential area in Lagos yesterday. If you go to a background area, there was a crash and the videos are everywhere that you can see. The exact moment was captured on CCTV yet to be identified helicopter as it is at the time of this report. It crashed into a building in Ikeja and the aircraft burst into flames near the Murtala Muhammad International Airport. Its destination was Murtala Muhammad International Airport but it didn't make it there. Or maybe we do not know because thank God all the four passengers we've been told survived. Whether they are going to survive beyond today and come back to normal life is another case. But we thank God for small messes, they survived and in fact when that helicopter crashed a lot of people didn't believe anybody can come out of that. But hey, God is God. You are seeing the video there and how it happened. God is God, God is no man. So if people could survive from there, then what is fuel subsidy removal that you cannot survive? Two people believed to be the pilots of the helicopter were rescued. It is not clear how many passengers, even though the news going around is that there were four passengers or four people on the plane, the pilots and some other passengers were there. If there were more, we are going to find out today. But the aircraft seemed really small, so maybe it was just four. But thank God that they survived. Emergency operatives from the National Emergency Management Agency were on ground to do what they were supposed to do and we applaud them as well. And not only them, there are some volunteers that were trying to put out the fire. There were people who were trying to rescue those who may be in the rubble or the crash or the burning flame and all that. And we really commend their efforts. They are still good Nigerians. We have our backs. We also hope that this cooperation, this good heart will also continue to make sure that we don't do jungle justice also. Instead of doing jungle justice that might turn out to be a false alarm that was just raised, then let us just always join hands to, if we catch a criminal for instance, take them to the authorities. And if we find something like this, let's not just wait for the authorities to come and say, okay, fire service needs to come, last mile needs to come, last sema needs to come and all that. We do our bit and make sure our country is better than it is today. Now, the second trending topic is that court grants and MFLs request to serve bail order on DSS. Now, this story is that Justice Nicolaus Oweibo of the Federal High Court sitting in Lagos on Monday granted the suspended central bank of Nigeria, CBN Gavna, Garwin and MFLA, leave to serve the director general of the Department of State Services, DSS, Mr. Yusuf Magaji Beachy by substituted means. The court order admitting him to bail and directing him his remand in the custody of the Nigerian Correctional Service. That's what the story is. And Justice Oweibo granted the order following an ex parte application moved by MFLs Council Mrs. Ogunaya Sonoga. The court in July, on July 25th granted MFLA a 50 million Naira bail and ordered that he should be remanded at the NCS as Nigerian Correctional Services after he was arraigned on two counts of illegal possession of firearms and ammunition. The charges bordered on alleged possession of a single barrel shotgun as well as possession of 123 rounds of live ammunition without a license. However, DSS rearrested MFLA on the court premises shortly after he was granted bail. We've seen this happening so many times. Somebody given bail and rearrested the same day and I cannot even start to reel out the names because they are long. In the 15th paragraph, Afidevich, in support of the ex parte application dated July 28th and deposed to by Adeogun Ayodeli Samuel from the law firm of Victor Okwara, he stated that the court on July 25th ordered that the defendant should be remanded at the Niger Correctional Service pending the perfection of the defendant's bail. The order was expressly for them to remand him at the NCS. Remember that fight between NCS and DSS? They stated that despite the order granting bail to the defendant on the 25th of July, 23, the Department of State Services, DSS rearrested the defendant or applicant away from the premises of the court. He stated further that by the actions exhibited by the DSS on July 25th, 23, it was or it will be practically impossible to serve the DSS personally and that's the reason why they are serving by other means that they call substituted means. So whatever it is, the DSS will have these things served them by other means. I don't know whether they are going to use the newspapers or they are going to use courier service or whatever they are going to use but substituted means are allowed and they are going to be served these. We do hope that this administration will do everything within its power to respect the rule of law because a country without the rule of law is, well, a lot of people will use the word a failed country but I just believe that Nigeria can be better than it is now. But let's start by respecting every sector of our national life. First of all, there must be law and the law depends on what the Constitution says and if we respect the law, respect the Constitution, a lot of things will move into place. That's what we want, people to respect the law and respect themselves as well. So it's only in Nigeria that when we see somebody resigning because of some things that have been discovered about them, we look at it like, oh, does this ever happen? Or some people resigning because they think they are not fit enough for that office because they have tried and they have failed and they just honorably say, okay, we're not doing anymore. Or they find something that is not in tandem with the ethics that they have and they resign and it is something really, really surprising to us. In Nigeria, a lot of things are very surprising to us. Somebody sees someone else's money and returns their money and it is a surprise to us because 99% of the people may just keep that money for themselves. Things like this, small things that matter, we should pay attention to them. Well, we are going to take a short break, see whether there is something for us from the weather room or if there is not, we'll just take that break and when we return, we'll go to the press and see what we can make of the press. Stay with us.