 Nigeria's oil industry will be marking a significant moment today as 650,000 barrels per day dango tea petroleum refinery gets commissioned in Lagos, a shift from government operating refineries to the private sector. What to know about this and how the Nigerian economy and Nigerians generally stand to benefit from it is our first topic, first hot topic on the breakfast this morning. UK plans to ban Nigerian students others from bringing their families over. The announcement is planned to be made this week. We'll be taking a look at that also on the breakfast this morning. We'll be taking a look at some headlines and some of our national dailies without the press or be joined by a guest to discuss that. Good morning and welcome to the breakfast on plus TV Africa. I am Maureen Menongwe. It is the mindset Monday we call it and you are welcome. So good to have you join us. And before we kick start anything this morning or before we go further we'll have a report for you on traffic report where an accident involving a truck happened around the leaky axis of Lagos. We have that report for you. Okay I've been informed that that report to be end after a while. Well glad to have you join us. I'll be doing this alone this morning. Yamgul is not here neither is Justin, but you are there so that makes it okay. Well our theme of the day is a need to escape difficult situations. A sense of feeling trapped you want to escape is within your right to do so. It's been said that self-preservation is the first law of nature. All human all living things indeed not just human beings when they see any or sense any form of danger the first thing that comes to mind is to escape. And it is sad that Nigerians are seeming to be escaping from Nigeria which should be home. Why do we have this on the increase? Why are Nigerians running away from home? Well that question is something that only those running away will probably be in the best position to answer but it is sad that our people are living home. Part of the topic we're taking a look at today is the fact that the UK plans to stop Nigerians and other students who are coming to the UK to study from bringing their families along with them. The only people exempted are those who are going there to study PhD because that is between three to five years. But if you're going there for your master's or any postgraduate course you know you'll not be allowed to go with your family as that you know Hidato used to be the case. So what does that say about the pressure? What does that say about migration? The rate of migration to that place. Top trending. Let's take a very first up trending for the day. FG to commence home delivery of passport is a very first up trending. Parents are begging FG to also release allowance for overseas students. That is our second top trending. If you've applied for your international passport before and it took you a very long time to get it I'm sure that this first hot topic is good news to you. I understand that fresh applications will last just six weeks now and then renewal is just three weeks. That for me is a great improvement. There's been a lot of work going on there in that ministry trying to sanitize the whole place. Those who have been fingered as sabotaging government effort in making getting of passport seamless have been shown the way out. Some are being investigated even as we speak so if they can put this through and make sure that wherever you are your passports will be delivered to you at home as is the standard practice global best practice really then it would be a very good take for Nigeria to have that achieved and so a very second top trending which I've mentioned earlier is parents beg FG to release allowance for overseas students. Parents of Nigerian scholars in foreign countries have sought the intervention of the minister of education on the non-payment of their children's allowance. Nigerian students affected include beneficiaries of the bilateral education agreement. Studying in countries like Algeria, China, Cuba, Egypt, Hungary, Japan, Mexico, Morocco, Romania, Russia, Serbia, South Korea, Tunisia, Turkey and Ukraine are owed up to five months allowance for this year alone. That is not good news. This present administration is about to leave. The parents are worried that the next government coming in may not consider this a priority and so they are begging the present administration of President Mohammad Ibu Hari to do something urgently to see that their children who are being owed these allowances are paid. Each scholar is entitled to supplementation allowances of $6,000 per annum to augment feeding, local transport, maintenance, equipment, book, warm clothing allowances of $250 per annum and health insurance of $200 per annum. So this is a very, very serious crime here by parents of children living abroad, studying abroad who are entitled to some form of allowances. The parents are worried that their children are being owed months and they've also learned that some of the children are beginning to beg to survive and this is not a trend we want to see encouraged because you never can tell how far this children will be pushed into the survival mode. So they are appealing to the government to urgently look into this so the children would not need to be tempted to do something that would not just tarnish their name but also tarnish the name of the country. So hopefully this administration will look into that because it is indeed an urgent matter. The administration has just barely few days to go. What can be done remains to be seen. Well we'll move now to the weather report and when we come back we'll go to off the press to take a look at some headlines on the national dailies. Do stay with us.