 Now, reactions have continued to throw President Mohammed Bahri's cabinet with shuffle, including the sake of ministers of power and agriculture and rural development. Now, analysts believe it is a good development, but stress that the reshuffling is not enough. Jacinta Obuco tells us more. The reshuffling which the presidency has said would be continuous is the first of its kind. During his first term between 2015 and 2019, the ministers who left the cabinet reside on their own. Among them were Kemi Adosh and former finance minister who was involved in a certificate scandal, and Amina Mohammed, former environment minister who got a United Nations job. Guests on plus TV Africa's breakfast show support the president's move, faulting their efficiency, alluding that the termination of their appointments was not unwarranted. The minister of power for instance, it's difficult to be able to point out that any achievement, any stalling performance that has been able to achieve since he came into office. What we have seen is that in the last two years, four years before he came into office, electricity has been increased by about 400% in the area of agriculture. You would discover that this food is extremely expensive now. As a family man, we used to put $20,000 down now. Now you have to put something like $50,000 to $60,000 down. These were two ministries that have quite frankly been on the performing in the last two years. Now if you talk about the agricultural sector, you know, Mr. Adebay alluded to the fact that food prices have been skyrocketing. Of course that is not directly the fault of the minister, but you would have expected some strategic response from that ministry in terms of certain policies and initiatives that would have driven the agricultural sector forward, which did not happen. While Mark Adebayo believes the reshuffling is not enough, Ayodele Adeyo speaks on yardsticks for ministers' performance. The reshuffling did not go far enough. The president needs to look at the area of defense. You know, which is responsible for our security. Well, the president should look at it critically. Everybody involved in the security management of this country ought to go, ought to be replaced. It's first the strategic agenda and the policy direction that the ministry sets. How clear that vision is, what the objectives are and how achievable those objectives are. It is hoped that the sect minister's replacements will result in better results and efficiency. Jacinta Ubuku for PLOS TV Africa.