 Welcome back to the breakfast and plus TV Africa. On the 23rd of September 2019, here's what happened in history. British travel company Thamaskook Group declared bankruptcy. This particular event left employees stranded and jobless in their numbers. I mean as much as 600,000 customers were stranded abroad, hotels throughout the world were struck with a £338 million or €415 million dollars in unpaid bills. Thamaskook is a 170-year-old British travel company and airline and this particular situation cost, you know, this stranded and unemployment for about 150 British people. And the British Department for Transport and Civil Aviation Authority had prepared plans on codenamed Operation Matherhorn and that's the repatriates, passengers who were British and were stranded. It was the largest ever peacetime repatriation in the history of the United Kingdom and it topped the operation of the government that was carried out some years back in 2017 after the collapse of Monarch Airlines. Okay that's pretty interesting, you know and of course points to take out there is, you know, how, you know, sometimes, you know, failure of, you know, just a slight failure in the organization can affect hundreds of people or maybe even thousands of people, you know, and what the immediate response should be at a time like that. I've always known Thamaskook, I really always felt Thamaskook was a cookware maker. I really always felt that way. We understand. We understand. You know, into making kitchenware. We understand. You know how names can be over there. You can have a Jesus stone, you know. So and I think no, I think it's maybe because I've seen, maybe I'm just, you know, daydreaming but I think I've seen, you know, some kitchenware that is, you know, named Thamaskook, some pans and things like that. But that's what I thought. The name of the travel company was initially known as GMC but in 2003 they rebranded and became known as Thamaskook. You know, obviously they seized operations in the past few years because of, you know, that bankruptcy that they declared, you know. So yeah, that's what happened today in history and we'll take a break here and when we come back we'll be taking a look at sex education in Nigeria. Are we doing it right?