 We're moving on underneath tonight and it's important to bring us something away from the 2023 elections. If you want a country where fairness, equity, and justice truly reign, then we must go back to the drawing board and embrace restructuring. These were the words of the leader of the late King Kaodomaki at a lecturing book presentation in his honor held in Ikeja Lagos. Plastivist correspondent Love Ikuko Yedokun was there and brought in this report. It is one year since the passing on of Yenka Odomaki. This book lunch was put together in his honor. His wife wrote the book to immortalize him. Life without him is almost empty for me because each day I sleep, you know, when I wake up I feel his presence and at times I feel that, oh, that up to today I still have his phone with me and when I switch off that phone, when I was in the U.S. I switch off and I say, oh, he has forgotten his phone. Then I send information to the phone at times. So life has been, you know, has been terribly difficult. It's so, I mean it's so difficult for me to agree that it's no longer here. Trubius flowed from friends, family and close associates for the late Yenka Odomaki. We are siding by this passage that are consoled by the legacies he left behind. The legacy of commitment to truth and improvement of a society based on equity, justice and fairness. Nigeria is a work in progress and there is no doubt that as we work for the betterment of our society, the indelible memory of exploits of Yenka Odomaki will remain evergreen. The greatest tribute we can pay to Yenka Odomaki is to decide collectively here that we are going to continue the battle for a new Nigeria, a new Nigeria that will be anchored on justice and fair play. I thank God for his life. I'm only imagining today if the dead can only look back. Many would not believe they do. My faith says they do. Because the Bible says in Hebrews chapter 12 that we are surrounded by cloud of witnesses and not only that we are at the miss of the spirits of just men made perfect. I'm sure if you look back today you will realize that he had not lived in vain. Keeping the legacies of the late Odomaki is Paramount's wife. Just like her latest band, she wants to see Nigeria return to true federalism. All the ideals that Yenka lived and died for, I will continue to keep it. These legacies, I will keep it. I will continue by the grace of God to remain strong and I promise that I will never let you down. Yenka Odomaki died at the age of 54. From Lagas Lab, Ikuku Uyiduku, Plus TV News.