 Moving on, Women's Situation, Room Nigeria, Security Agencies and relevant stakeholders have told Kaduna residents in Nigerians to always report gender-based violence cases. They made a call at a one-day dialogue strategic awareness with security, religious leaders, community leaders and critical stakeholders with aim to foster ways and seek lasting solutions to end gender violence in the state. The convener of the Women's Situation, Room Nigeria, Kaduna Coordinator Kautume Abdulaziz said women and children encounter the most form of violence. So far we've been able to get a commitment from them to collaborate with community-based women, youth groups, religious leaders, traditional leaders to see how they can strengthen relationship trust and relationship to bring an end or to ameliorate issues of violence. This is the integral part of our life and as the election is forthcoming, we are calling on all to cut their votes peacefully, to avoid any form of violence, any form of hate speeches, anything at all that can ignite violence. We are calling on youth and women to stay away from that and to be ambassadors of peace in the society. The Kaduna State Commissioner of Police, who was represented by DSPS Abe Johnson, added that people must assist security agencies with vital information in combatant crime in society and also urge the general public, especially teenagers, to speak out against the rape, harassment, bullying and any other form of violence. To assist the security, especially the police in combatant crime, because the rate of crime now, you cannot do anything as a security person, as a police. You cannot do anything. You cannot enter any other place just to make an arrest and go out freely. So we please want the public to assist the police in combatant crime. Let it be peaceful. It is not do or die of fear. Let there be peace in anything we are doing. Let it be peaceful. That's my call on to them. To educate them and tell them to say no to rape, no to indecent dressing and all sorts of violence, bullying and the rest, because we tell them that when they see somebody around them that they feel that they are not comfortable with, that they feel it's a threat, they should alert the nearest security outposts or their teacher in the school or principal to work with women organizations that want us to partner with them so that we can bring an end and say no to violence against women. Today with this program now, we came to know that the Karnas state government has law.