 All right, thanks for staying with us. October 13th is designated as international day for disaster risk reduction with a focus on encouraging a global culture of risk awareness and catastrophe preparedness. Now the day is an opportunity to acknowledge the progress being made to us preventing and reducing disaster risk and losses of life livelihood economies and basic infrastructure in line with international agreements for reducing global disaster risk and losses. Sounds like a tongue twister. Well, some things they say that they are inevitable, right? But at the same time, I believe that if we are very, very proactive in the approach of anything, even for the ones that are inevitable, like natural disasters that are inevitable, if we are proactive, there is always because I mean, nature has been really fair to us that everywhere I'm talking about in the universe, the universe has been fair enough to every human being that if you plan and you prepare, right, no matter how grave the disaster would be, it will not be, the impact would not be as much, right? I mean, I'm just saying this in line with what is happening in local gestate, for instance, with the dam and all of that, right? It's not like you did not know that certain things were going to be, what's going to happen. So why weren't the government proactive enough to at least avert the death that has happened, the excessive losses that have happened, right? I mean, I just believe that, yes, they can be disaster, but we truly have the capacity to reduce the risk that it comes with. And let's just be proactive. With that proactivity, we can actually go far. That's what I feel. But hey, that's the conversation for another day. So I was going to say quickly before we go into our what's in the news yesterday, I talked about the young man that was on life support, trying to battle for his life. And it's so sad. I mean, hearing that Rico, Rico, that's his name, big brother, former star. And you know what really broke my heart today? And I think we're going to talk about it. I think, like you mentioned it as well, where people are filming, somebody is in the hospital. I mean, this brought me to many years when my sister, when my sister was in intensive care, you know, I just could picture that if my sister was in this country, she would have been dead buried and gone by now. I mean, there was no way she would have lived, right? I don't understand, first of all, our approach to emergencies. I don't understand our approach to, you know, that this is a critical health condition, right? So many needless death that happens, right? Somebody is in the hospital, battling his life, and all you think about doing is recording. Our heart goes out to, I mean, all his friends, especially the ones from the big brother house, they've been throwing a lot of what's it called, messages all over social media. My heart goes out to him. But this issue of our healthcare practitioners, it has to be treated. What I'd like to say in addition to that is that we're supposed to, I would like them to set an example with these people and indict them for manslaughter. Maybe when people start facing consequences, you stop joking with people's life, because they had a girlie there, they didn't even put him on it. He was sat in a chair, someone that you claim you couldn't resuscitate. And then you're all arguing about, oh yeah, carry him now, no carry him now, never. It's so insensitive. And whoever works in the medical field and captures on a phone, somebody's condition, which is what they did when was this guy, Kobe Bryant died. And the policeman had recorded it with his phone and had released it, not in the right stream. And they charged him to court. And she won the case, I mean, you took that story. Yes. So I just imagine if we have really, we need to have scapegoats. They should go after them. Yes, we have, we need to get these people because guess what? Even there is a patient confidentiality, patient doctor confidentiality. That was breached, right? So I mean, there's so much that is going on here. Let's make examples of that. Absolutely. Gloria, your story quickly. Today, my news is about rising prices of commodities and other things. Consumers of gas in Lagos state have expressed displeasure over the hike in the price of cooking gas. The 12.5 kg cylinder cooking gas price has risen to 12,000 Naira. And many consumers have said, and many consumers said they may move back to cheap alternatives like Firewood. At this point, we are quite frustrated at the rate at which the price of every commodity in the market keeps surging. A consumer said, so that's what I found in the news. One of the things that caught my attention, let's say, it's generally what is still happening. So I remember then before COVID, the price of cooking gas was about 3,000 Naira about. And after a while, it rose to 5,000 Naira. I remember as last month when I bought this thing, it was about 10,000 Naira. And currently it's now 12,000 Naira. So maybe I'll be one of the people that will go back to using Firewood or stove or anything. That brings another problem. It's just like, where are we heading to? Will this stop? That's the question. Is there a point at which we're expecting that thing to start going down? That's what we need to choose. Who are our leaders? Our next set of leaders? It's so painful for people like us that are like salary earners because at the end of the day... It's not a salary earner. I don't know if you're a salary earner. I'm not sure this is because you're... Even my child who lives abroad is complaining about increasing prices. It's all over the world because the price or feel and the euro-dollar effect seems to trickle down to everybody. I hardly see things reversed when it comes to prices, but I believe the value should increase. Let's be hopeful. When we get the right people. Okay. Lady, your story, please. My story would be expansiated in our today's story because it's about the obedient movement. I had seen on a page on Instagram where someone was making fun of Shawwari, saying that he had said some negative things about Obi in the past and then he saw him in person and he was almost as if he was kissing us. He was playing and acting like he never had an issue with the guy. Which brings us to what I said about it and the reason why I found it interesting is if he has come to the realization that he is not such a bad guy, after all, why don't the little parties spread all across, join forces and make themselves a formidable party? Because we know that we almost seem to run a two-party system in Nigeria, APC and PDP. But everybody that has had the aspiration of being a president with a smaller party and they know, they just don't want to admit, they know they don't have a chance. Join forces with somebody that seems as if the people are rallying after. And let's see if we can all put that force together and choose a candidate that seems to be speaking our language. All right, so let me quickly take, I think I have like two stories I want to quickly run through. First of all, they said the Federal Executive Council had approved that MTN would take over the construction of Enigo Onitsha Expressway at over 202.8 billion Naira under the Road Infrastructure Tax Credit scheme. I particularly love this. This was announced, the Minister for Works and Housing, Babatuni Fashula disclosed this to the State House correspondents shortly after the week's council meeting chaired by the President, Major Mohamed Abu Hari, retired at the Presidential Villa. So according to Fashula, the approval followed Executive Order 7 signed by the President in January of 2019. He said this would enable the telecom giant to complete the dualization of the 110-kilometer road. I like this story in particular because, again, if you look at the environment within VI, I think there's the next stretch in Baghdad that Dangoti had done. A lot of private companies, access banks, different companies, they're coming together to take on infrastructural projects, right? So all the government needs to do is give them tax holidays because if we know now already that it's not looking like if we are waiting and waiting on the government, things might be fixed. So I like the idea of partnering with private companies. So instead of giving them exorbitant taxes that would not even know where the taxes are going, let's even see that this is what this is being used for. So I particularly found the story interesting and that's why I took it. Then secondly, I wanted to quickly take another story I think is also linked to the conversation that we're having today of one of the ex...what's his name now? The ex...you see these obedience people, yeah? Yeah, well, I explained to you. So there are reactions as the ex-general. That's the hashtag answers. Yes, he made the Peter O'Bee's list. So he's amongst the 1,234 member of the Presidential Campaign Council of the Labour Party, Standard Bearer Peter O'Bee. So now criticisms have trailed that appointment of his name is Major General John Enetche, right? He...because he had described the leaky shooting as being photoshopped, right? So they have...what's he called? There's a lot of backlash saying that why would this particular person you know be in part of the defense team? Well, I'll speak more about this when we come back from the break but we're going to be discussing what's he called? The obedience movement that we're asking and Nigeria is allowed to choose differently. Stay with us, we'll be right back.