 Welcome back to The Breakfast Here on Plus TV Africa. Now let's go back in history to 1978 to share with you on this day, Muhammad Ali once again defended his world heavyweight boxing title and won the championship against Leon Spinks at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. Of course, he won it for the third time in his career. It was the first fighter to ever do so in a unanimous 15-round decision. After his shock win of Ali to become heavyweight champion, Leon Spinks was stripped of the WBC title for not facing its number one ranked contender, Ken Northern. Instead, he agreed to rematch with Ali. Ali eventually entered the rematch as a two-and-a-half to one favorite and eventually won the game, won the fight eventually. And right after this fight is when he retired from boxing. He eventually returned a few years later to boxing, but this was one of the first times that he retired from boxing. And also to go back in history, heavyweight fights that he had previously won before Leon Spinks in 1963, he had defeated Sonny Liston in 1965. He defeated Floyd Patterson in 1974. This is after Leon Spinks, he then fought George Foreman. And I think that was the one that was called the rumble in the jungle. And then in 1978, he eventually won the fight against Leon Spinks. But this is, you know, most of the, some of the biggest fights, you know, that made Cassius Clay later known as Muhammad Ali, who he was. Yes, fantastic news there. We know obviously that this was a match that was, you know, highly televised. People needed to see what was happening. Muhammad Ali fighting back to glory and winning that world heavyweight championship. Good one. Absolutely. And in 2020, the family of Brenna Taylor announced a 12 million dollars, 12 million US dollars wrongful settlement. What happened was we know that Brenna Taylor had been killed by police officers who, you know, just came into the room that night to execute a search warrant for a drug bust, but it was a wrong apartment then. And the fight at her, she was just 26 years old. And it was a very big story, you know, one of those stories that shook the US regarding racial discrimination and things like that. You know, but it was in distinct history that the city of Louisville actually agreed to pay her family the sum of 12 million dollars. And it was a lot, a lot of money. It was one of the largest of its kind in the United States because we know that before the end police departments are usually shooted from having to pay damages for death in their custody. And no police officer had been criminally charged with the death of Taylor. But we know that at the end of the day, the family received the sum of 12 million dollars. I mean, I believe that's the least they can do because taking a life, really, you can never buy that back. And we've seen cases and cases where the police in the United States and even elsewhere in the world, you know, just, would I fail to exercise restraint or do their due diligence and then just end the promising lives of people who have, you know, careers ahead of them, you know, lives to live and people to love and just snatch that, you know, because of racial profiling and all the challenges of this thin history. I'm losing the grief to 12 million dollar settlement with her family. This was one of the saddest, you know, moments of 2020. And this was just a few weeks, I believe, after George Floyd's killing. And sadly, I remember that there was an online campaign for Berna Taylor that ran for months, you know, because it didn't seem like her death was making the news, you know, and I think it was because it now became an online campaign that they started to take it seriously because she was killed in her sleep, you know, without, you know, you know, being violent or without the police feeling threatened in any way. They stormed into our apartment and shot at her while she was asleep. Eventually there was that online campaign, you know, and her name continued to be mentioned. I remember tennis player Nomi Osaka also, you know, made mention of her name while it became popular back then. And that was the reason that they started to take it serious and eventually she got this settlement. But it was 2020 was a year of, you know, I think it was the year of the largest discussion in quite a while concerning racial discrimination and police brutality against African-Americans and some of all of that. Sadly, this is how it ended. $12 million I would never, obviously, never bring back Berna Taylor. $12 million, I beg your pardon. We'll never bring back Berna Taylor. But the conversation continues with regards to racial discrimination and police brutality, including here in Nigeria because apparently police are back on the streets here in Nigeria. Well, that's another discussion for another day. Short break when we come back. Our first major conversation for today. Who are these six Nigerians that have been accused of funding terror and funding the Boko Haram sect here in Nigeria? The United Arab Emirates has put out, you know, a list that has 38 names. We're going to be taking a look at this and seeing what the Nigerian government should immediately start to do. We're going to be getting into that conversation after the short break here on the Plus TV Africa. Stay with us.