 And now to some entertainment news, a film festival has taken place in Lagos with a focus on poor communities and the plight of persons who live in them. Eight mini-documentaries were screened at the inclusive Lagos Film Festival. The organizer, DG, said that the film touched on the issue of housing, forced eviction and stereotyping. Short documentaries that bothers on housing and the issues of forced eviction, the issues of stereotyping, people who live in poor communities of Lagos as criminals. So we've been able to screen materials produced by these young people speaking against the stereotypes that they are criminals. And so you see young filmmakers here saying to the world, we are programmers just the same way your own kids aspire to be doctors and engineers. We too, we live in these poor communities. We also have aspirations. A researcher and both actor wants the Lagos state government to accommodate residents of poor communities in its urban development plan. We don't improve the city at the expense of people who were living there before just because, I don't know, they don't have as much money or they don't have as many resources or they don't have as much power. So it becomes like a power game. So we want in those improvements, we want to carry everybody along. We want to make room for rich and poor. You want to make sure that people who were living in a particular place before living and working, when the place is now improved, the technical term is gentrified. When the place is gentrified through public or private intervention or a mix of both, we want them to also have a place in that place. Before you do anything, go, liaise with these people, find an alternative way. Work will better suit them. We have the ability, the government have the ability to make lives better. Hello, hope you enjoyed the news. Please do subscribe to our YouTube channel and don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates.