 You're still watching Waze Now. Every June 6th is World Past Day or sometimes called World Past Awareness Day. The day was created to raise awareness of how past management helps preserve the quality of life for you and your loved ones. Ha! One thing I hate more, I hate most. Crawling, anything crawling. Like I have one jaw of, you know, the concentrated sniper. So most times maybe if I want to travel like for a week or two, I'll just put that put them at different angles in the house, you know, just to control past. And again, with the rains, right? It's going to even, like if you are, if you are not, if you do not pay attention to, you know, controlling past in your house now to make it even worse, you know, to make it worse. I don't like anything that crawls. Spiders, roaches, so my house. You're thinking of past infestation, so you're thinking of fumigating. Don't be thinking. It's stressing me out. I know the sad thing about, I've had to throw, there's one time in my house I had to throw away microwave, gas cooker. I threw it all away because roaches had infested, and it's so irritating. They just keep coming out. Your toaster, every other thing, it was so, but I had a very terrible, no, but that one, the nanny was dirty, you know, brought everything infested in my house. So I had to throw away everything, send it all over again and all of that. Because once you let it, and we roaches, you know, the eggs, it just keeps multiplying. So that's why, you know, this is my space now. I'm so happy. I don't see anything. I'm also very deliberate, because if you are very deliberate about hygiene and making sure that, you know, all those corners and your doors are properly sealed. You know, I had to buy all those doors and sleep to seal up those. Yeah, I sealed up everywhere. So I don't have, I don't have roach or anything. I'm really grateful because I don't like those things at all. I don't know. Jela, do you have roach problems or no ma? Yeah, I mean, I'm actually very intentional about, I hate anything that crawls. I can't even stand it. I mean, I could literally almost run mad if I see a roach, you know. So I'm always very particular about little things like that. And I discover that things as little as vinegar, you know, it really helps. You know, I just, yeah, as simple as that, it just helps white surfaces ensure that you trash your bin every evening, you know, just so that I don't like them at all. I'm telling you, that's vinegar, even bleach actually. So even sometimes on my, my, my kitchen surface, the, the marble tile, I use, you know, bleach. Yes. And just wipe off that, you know, because anything, it, it repels. So, ah, yeah, yeah, you don't do it. I think the hygiene part is, is here for me because when you leave food exposed and the smell attracts rodents, it attracts pests generally. So hygiene is very, very key when you want to deal with pests apart from spraying, because sometimes you find out the ones in Nigeria, they don't, it's like you're spraying perfume on them. Thank you. Right. And they're still all over the place. So you just have to make sure that your dustbins are well closed. And if there, there's food waste there, tie it up and take it outside. So some of those things can really, really help when you, especially when you're also sealed some of the areas, access routes through which they come into the house. Absolutely. Another thing again, if you have very dirty neighbors, God bless you, because drainages. Yeah. No, because if you have neighbors that are like dirty, like in a compound, maybe you're not alone in your compound and your neighbors and all of that, you, that way you really must be very, very happy that my neighbors are, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, you have to be very happy. If there's anybody that is somebody on the street, anytime I come out, I'm like, they carry everyone's, long mark pick up our waste. Why don't they pick yours? But this hasn't paid. Yes. Why? So that's, absolutely. Okay, ladies, let us quickly go through what we found in the news. Yola, let me come to you first. Okay. So my headline news is Reaver's pastor sentenced to death by hanging for killing choir misdressed. So this is, well, a pastor that murdered his choir misdressed and also, you know, there's an additional murder charge relating to the death of the choir misdressed friend and the baby, you know, so the high court in Potarkot today gave that ruling and said that, you know, the prosecutor was able to prove beyond reasonable doubt and that the confession statement made by Ocora Ford, that's the pastor himself, was very indicting. It was believed that the deceased women had visited the pastor in his residence where he convinced them to join him in a lonely bush where he committed this act on them respectively. I mean, there's a whole lot of imputes from the International Federation of Women Lawyers and they were able to ensure that justice was served. Of course, on the part of the pastor, his own lawyer says that the case, well, the judgment will be appealed because the court misconceived and misinterpreted the law. I mean, for me, when I saw this, I was somewhat sad for the deceased women because, I mean, whatever they must have done, regardless of the arguments for and against it, they did it probably from a place of trust, you know, you trust your spiritual leader and then it makes you let down your guard. And then when you see the legal system, you know, show that, you know, justice in some way is served, at least to give the family some form of closure. I mean, it's good news because too often, more times than not, you know, we hear that, we hear of cases like this and it's just another statistic, you know, it's just gone. It's left for the family to pick up the pieces of whatever happened without any closure, no form of justice, you know, whatever. But I mean, this is, I can't say gives me joy, but I mean, and again, I was quite surprised that the courts went for the debt penalty. That's not very common, you know, and it's debt by legal. No, I think recently the courts have been granting debt by hanging because remember the case I took last week of the OAU students that was that the hotelier and three of his member of staff, all of them, they were, they were all sentenced to death by hanging. So I think, you know, we need to really get to that point so that people, before you think of any crime, you, you think twice. Absolutely. All right. So, Norman, let me come to you quickly. All right. My story is a rather sad one. It's about the popular Asian American resident doctor, Dr. Nikita Motima, who unfortunately ended her life in New York. It's such a sad story because this is someone who was an anesthesiologist trainee and she got her bachelor's degree from New York University and has done her training with St. John's University as well. And this was someone who was such an advocate for resident doctors. She drove her time at Montfort Medical Center. She created a union to demand better work conditions and pay, pay scales and even mental health situations for healthcare practitioners. She was such an advocate and she continued to push whatever that affected resident doctors, just trying to create a better environment, working environment for them. And to suddenly end her life by suicide, it's just, it begs the question about mental health. You know, a lot, I keep saying that a lot of times we see strong people and they look like they haven't all figured out. I think more important than not is that time where you need to ask to find out how they're doing because sometimes people put up a facade of strength and being able to do it all. Meanwhile, they're struggling inside. And of course, we can't emphasize the need to pay attention to mental health. It's, it's very, very important for even workers, not just medical personnel. In this case, we're talking about practitioners. We already know how intense the environment. I think they even need to, yeah. It's that they have to deal with, but there are also other environments. I mean, I think employers should be very conscious in the, in the area of mental health to take into cognizance how their workers are dealing with different environmental challenges because this is something that is becoming more often than not. Before it used to be a case of people who did not have anything tangible doing, but now we're seeing professionals were seeing people who are at the height of their career committing suicide. So it's not just limited to people who are struggling. Anyone successful or not can be struggling and it's important for us to also bring awareness to the fact that there are resources available to help people deal with mental health situations. Absolutely. It's a very sad one. And I think we have some lineup for mental health conversations, you know, that we're going to probably talk about in the course of the months to come. Jennifer, your story. All right. Can CAN, PFN Congratulatory Letters, misplaced Christian groups. So a coalition of Christian youth groups on Tuesday described their Congratulatory Letters extended to President Bola Sinubu. Now, that's by the Christian Association of Nigeria and Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria as misguided and a mere expression of goodwill and not a substance of the election that is not credible and couldn't have produced a credible outcome. So they basically sent him a letter, expression of goodwill, but then they are also saying that it is not to what will I use now. It's not to say that they are accepting the outcome of the election or they are totally happy with the fact that he's the president, but then you still have to congratulate and respect the office. So that's basically the comment section is a mess. Politechnics get 130 million each as intervention fund. Now the tertiary education trust fund has approved the 130 million for each Politechnics as Zonal Intervention in its 2023 intervention line. Now the Director of Infrastructure of the Funds, Buhari Mikailu, who confirmed the development at the Tert Fund NBTE Sensation Workshop that happened recently. That's today actually, it happened today in Abuja. The Zonal Intervention for Rectors and Directors of Skill in Beneficiary Politechnics said that this fund would be geared towards reinvigorating skills, acquisition in Politechnics across the country. It said the intervention was to consolidate the efforts of the National Board of Technical Education in increasing the capacities of Politechnics to deliver on their mandates. So I just want to quickly say that a lot of problems that we have in Nigeria, right? If we have fantastic technical institutions as the Politechnics, there, there would be able to find solutions to some of the challenges that we have infrastructure wise, right? Politechnics is beyond just saying you want to move 130 million. How do they arrive at these amounts, right? This intervention amount. We can't keep doing things like that. We need to understand the importance of some Politechnics in other parts of the world. You can't even enter. It has to be the brightest minds that are admitted into those schools. Well, here it is lopsided, you understand? It's somebody who is not able to go. They're still that disparity, discrimination between Politechnics graduates and it's supposed to be the other way around. So I mean, before you say you want to do intervention funds, first of all, you need to know the importance of how valuable a Politechnic would, I mean, how much it would contribute to some of the infrastructural challenges and all these challenges that we have in terms of infrastructure or maybe planning or whatever that we have in our country and then invest in those institutions. So let it not be like you're giving handouts, that we truly understand that these people can actually solve some of the problems that we have. I sent a video yesterday. I don't know if you guys saw it, the video of the electric care care that a young boy was called developed. Now we are complaining about all these issues of fuel and all of that. It is supposed to be in these technical institutions. You understand that innovations are supposed to be coming out from different angles solutions to the challenges that we're facing. So let's stop all these handouts. When I saw the story, I just felt like, come on, we can't be doing this, you know. In fact, we're not 30 million. How do you do it right there? Do you understand? Do you believe that they would require, I'm sure, to be much more than that? Because most of the polytechnics are dilapidated. I mean, we've talked about this before. I can't remember the exact show. I think it was last, early last year or two years ago, we actually talked about how the government needs to upgrade polytechnics and upgrade their certificate because it has gone beyond saying that like, now they treat them like second, like second citizens. You get people who went to polytechnics and then they come out. You're telling them they can't get the regular jobs that people with BSEs are getting. And it makes no sense to me because if you actually go to schools like maybe Yabba Tech or Lautech, for example, and you see what these students are building and what they are coming up with, you'll be marveled. And I don't know. I think the government needs to do something about it. It's just the lopsided decisions. We're very classist. I'm telling you, the classist is a classist something. But on that note, I want to talk a little bit less about some powder. Stay with us soon, bye.