 The Minister of Women Affairs, Pauline Tallinn, has frowned at the low pace of justice delivery for victims of sexual and gender-based violence, SGBV, in the country. Tallinn, during the launch and inauguration of the National Strategic Knowledge Management Technical Working Group on SGBV, said thousands of reported cases are not adequately handled by the justice system. She appealed to stakeholders to help secure justice for victims, stating that a technical working group will focus on building partnerships between stakeholders and provide guidance for implementation, among other things. What we have on hand now is over 3,000 reported cases. But out of these over 3,000 reported cases, only 11 have been prosecuted. That is not acceptable. I appeal to the justice system to rise up to the occasion to ensure that no justice is delayed. I also want to call on all states that are yet to domesticate the VAPT Act and the Charles Wright Act to ensure the speedy domestication of our Charles Wright Act and the VAPT Act. It is important to acknowledge the critical role the partners working at both the state and the local levels have in making this work. The technical working group will provide technical and strategic inputs in all the programme thematic groups for evidence-based planning and policy decision-making towards addressing sexual and gender-based violence in an effective and efficient manner in Nigeria. I look forward and we request women to give their maximum support and men, of course, because we always talk about he for she and we have many men around here. And we are very sure and confident that whatever we do, the men will always be by our side as we are always by the side of the men to help them and to create a better understanding of what it is to say we have to have a gender lens for all of us to look at whatever is happening issues and programmes that have to do with humanity must have gender lens.