 Also in the news, it is not yet clear if the Nigerian Custom Service has carried out a major examination on the container laden with guns and ammunition discovered over the weekend. The NCS had said there would be a proper examination of the container to ascertain the number of guns and the type of ammunition in it, while also ensuring that the owner of the container is fished out. LA and plus TV Africa spoke with the legacy PRO of the Nigerian Custom Service attached to the Tin Can Island port, which C.J. May is on this, who was spoken to on this issue, and this is what he had to say. It's working properly. The truth is that even the best of technologies, best of the conventional, you know, state-of-the-art technologies will still beat your system. For instance, the U.S. is still having issues with their borders in Mexico, you know, some people involved in illegal drug transactions. So the focus of it is the kind of working progress because we have deployed all manner of systems to check this kind of illegal import, you know. We've actually gotten scanners, but the scanners are yet to be fully deployed, because there are certain parameters and conditions that need to be met. We are hoping that by the time Customs goes 100 percent to your automation, full automation, but then we go full automation, some of these things can be mixed together. But meanwhile, we are not letting our gas down. We are insisting on further examination, and that was why I was able to assemble on this container, which we are still conducting examination on. So I'm not leaving any stone unturned.