 Nigerians have been charged to take ownership rather than continue to vandalize public facilities. The charge was given at a one-day sensitization program organized by the Merritt Chapel of the Nigerian Union of Journalists at Doe State Council in collaboration with the State Command of the Nigerian Security Civil Defence Corps. Before today we have been doing this in the state. We have been sensitizing members of the public. We've gone to so many places, crowded places to let people know of the importance of protecting critical national assets and infrastructure of governments. And for this we cannot stay in our offices. We have to go out to the public to engage with communities, with traditional leaders, with religious leaders, to join us in creating awareness. For them to be able to create awareness, we need to pass the knowledge to them, to enable them to cascade and take it down to members of their communities. For those who vandalize government properties, public utilities, the Philip for their doing the wrong thing is the part of non-intervention, by way of punishment, or by way of restraint by the authorities that should do so. So doing it and telling them is the way to stop vandalism. As there's no need for us to destroy the property even when the government is not giving us what we want. But it's not nice for us to resolve to set up by destroying our own property. It's like you building a house, going back to the same place and destroying it. I don't think it's a work on development. And I want to give this opportunity again to advise the youth in those states to come together so that we will work with the government. In any area that we know the government is not doing well, we can always approve them in the right way by not destroying the government property. So for me, I felt it was proper and timely for us to have a sensitization program to enlighten some of these people who are perpetually involved in vandalizing government property, vandalizing public property. I had to consult with my group and we all agreed that we should have an advocacy program to bring to bear before the society to renew that commitment on the society, on the need to protect public property.