 And a senior advocate of Nigeria, Obafemi Adewale, has appealed to all fielding parties in the Kanu electoral conflict to remain calm. Avoid heating up the polity and wait for the Supreme Court's decision on the Kanu governorship election. Obafemi Adewale set these in Adewakity shortly after attending a color crime organized in his honor by the young lawyer's firm of the NBA. He was reacting on to the controversy generated by the certified copies of the Court of Appeal judgment. Adewale said Nigeria's electoral system is not about laws, but about people who interpret the laws and decide the political atmosphere by the action. Adewale said the 1999 constitution has provisioned for every situation the country finds herself. I'm waiting to hear what the Supreme Court will say about it. The Court might say it's a topographic error, but it does not look like a topographic error to me. But the most important thing about our electoral system is that we must learn, we must learn to put service over and above any other consideration. It's not about laws. The laws are there. It is the people who operate the laws that decide whether the people of the country will benefit from the provisions of those laws or not. It is not the laws the place is at. People complain about our constitution for instance. But we have been running this constitution since 1999. We have been having national assemblies since 1999 and people will be telling us that this was put in place by a military. Well, how come since then they've not been able to change it? The truth of the matter is that it is not the constitution that is wrong. It is the people that are running it. And we need to learn that service with dignity, with integrity, pace more than going into public office to acquire money and not making any impact on the people. So you get notified about fresh news updates.