 Now International Day of the Girl Child is celebrated annually on October 11th to recognize girls who write the unique challenges that they face around the world. The theme for this year's IDG is invest in girls' right. Our leadership, our well-being. This year's theme focuses on the importance of investing in girls' right to achieve gender equality and sustainability. When girls are empowered to reach their full potential, they can drive change in their communities and their world. So, happy International Day of the Girl Child. Very important day. So I was at an event today and it was speaking to the issues and the challenges around women, especially in the workplace, young people. Do you choose between your work, your career, your family? Do you choose these kind of regular conversations, issues around imposter syndrome, where you're doing all the work? It seems like nobody's recognizing you. I was a bit, you know, would I say that, you know, because again, I'm raising boys. So I was a bit scared to try to create a balance in the conversation that these things are not things that are just unique to boys, I mean to girls, I mean, or female. It also happens to the male folks. So when I see days like this, it's very important that we recognize how far we've come as people, you know, especially with the kinds of rights now that women are able to, what's it called, to express. Unlike before, where because you were just female, you couldn't do certain things just because you were female. Not because you didn't have the ability or the capacity to do it. So in terms of how far we've come, we've come a very long way to now recognizing that girls are also human beings too and they have rights and they are able to express those rights, able to do things like vote, go to school and all of those things. Like literally we've come very far. I'd just like to say again, in as much as we're pushing, you know, because again, something led us to where we are that not created this gap that needed to be filled where the world's attention is on the girl child. We need to also create that balance so that when boys, you understand, are growing, they don't fall. I mean, yes, from now, we don't come back to not saying international day for a boy child, boys, these boys, you know what I'm saying. We have to create that balance. But this day is a very important day. It's so sad that a lot of female folks are not still able to do certain things, certain cultures, you know, and all of that. So many things need to be expunged. I think I was talking to someone on Sunday, yeah, at a dinner and there's a law in some part of Nigeria. I'm trying to remember the law now. You know, he was saying that he's so excited that that thing has been expunged, you know, from the culture. This was something that, you know, it affected women strongly. You know, and I think it was that same Sunday or maybe a day before that day, they just completely abolished it. I'll try to remember, but it was something very major. I mean, those kind of things, when you meet those milestones, it's things to celebrate. Well, you said it a lot. There have been a lot of things over the years that, you know, the girl child has not been, you know, even down to sports. I would say the things that probably personally concern me and even till date, you know, they're still... Pay disparities. Yeah, pay disparities and all that and a few other things. But like you said, it's the idea of celebrating the days also to drag a lot of awareness to the growing need for a lot of things in terms of when it concerns, as it concerns the girl child. And I'm happy we can celebrate it and we're still, because we, you know, we give birth to females, you know, we have females. So it's very, very important for us to take them into consideration in terms of what do they need? What are the things that over the years, like you said, that when the girl child was not, you know, did not apply to the girl child? And today we're able to celebrate that in sports, in arts, in education and in so many fields, even in tech, you know, as it is. But it's still something that we need to constantly bring to the forefront in terms of awareness so that people will constantly consider it and it's right there at the top of our mind. Okay, let's quickly run through what we found in today's news. All right, so for me, resident rescue boy, who was buried alive by his brother for allegedly stealing 1,000 naira in Kogi state. So according to the boy, he's the elder brother of the young little boy who stole. He said his mom or the mother had told him to punish the boy for stealing. And when he were questioning him, he said that he had stolen before in the past and nobody punished him, nothing was done to him. And then this time his mother gave, go ahead and told him to punish him. So my question is, okay, punish your kid brother. Why did you think of burying him? How is that a punishment? You're trying to kill the person. Like I fear that it doesn't make any sense to me, but they reported the case to the police. So I think the police is handing it. Coincidentally, I think I saw that news report and I think he buried him up to the next side. Do you know how you bury someone in sand or to punishment and stuff like that? I don't know what the intention is. Some people go all the way to that extent in terms of killing a family member or the brother, sister, cousin, just because of something. I think it was, I don't know what state it was, but 80 is in the North. An 18-year-old pregnant wife beat her. I can't remember how old the child was, but like less than six years and beat her to death because she defecated on herself. So in line with what you were saying about mental health, there's a lot going on. It's also good that we're coming to that realization that there's a lot of things happening because these things are backlogged. You know how our parents were raised is different from how they raised us. How they were raised is different from how we're raising our kids. So it's improving or getting worse in some areas is improving. Some areas is getting worse. It's the default mode that it's even getting better. How can you just first of all think punishment and you just go straight to bury? That's what I don't understand. I need to understand the mind of the child. It's what he has been approached to, right? You're talking about the child. Is the mindset, where was he coming from? He could have come from a household where you do something. You'd rather just pack your things and run to your neighbor's house and say I'm not coming back again. Because in fear of what you would go through. Let's take your story. So in line with what Jennifer just said, in the line of stealing. A doctor is jailed for two years for stealing hospital beds in a private bomb. So the medical superintendent, Muapar Adolfo Uche, was sentenced to two years in prison for stealing hospital beds from Immanuel General Hospital and Immanuel Psychiatric Hospital in Eckett's acquired bomb states. And he used his position to commit the crime. There were two other complices that were also sentenced. So this is just in line with what she was saying. It's the mindset. It's just how people... Well, I don't understand how people are punishing people for stealing. Stealing is stealing, sir. Stealing is stealing. There has to be a punishment for things like this. It's just like... This stealing hospital bed, is it not going to be easy to say about that? No, but you don't understand. To this guy, what I say is in mindset, he can ask himself, The hospital, it depends on the hospital. When we look into the hospital, we'll find out some other things. Maybe there's no lights. There's no drip. They've not paid views. So he would just be thinking, he either comes to him from a place of money making so he wants to make money, resell the bed and all that. Or he just comes to him from a place of... Some people are just like that. He's going to have to supply somewhere else now. But that's the thing, you are a doctor. You are in charge of your first... He's taking it to his practice. But that's the thing, you are in charge of saving people's lives. But you are here, you are moving the bed. You need a bed to save people's lives. He has his own clinic. I built a house for him. That's why, guys, it's not funny. It's not funny. That's why it's not funny. It's not funny to me. In fact, you are stealing the hospital's bed. That's how bad it has been. I've heard of cases of stealing drugs equipment. That's the point where you go to the extent of stealing a bed. There's no more dignity. My story, I don't want to follow up quickly on what Mary had taken yesterday on Davido. You know, there's been speculation. You're born twins, you're born twins, you're born twins, you're born twins. So Davido has come up to say that he should stop circulating old pictures. So apparently there's been a video going around of him on the bed sleeping and trauma on the bed and all of that video. A couple of celebrities, I think, I saw it on Yabba or Juice's page earlier today. They posted it telling him congratulations on the twin. My own is that, why is Davido putting all of us in suspense? You're born twins, I mean, we're born twins. Let us know where we are. But he wrote on X that please stop circulating old pictures. Because there's been so many reports going viral about him and trauma welcoming instead of twins. We're still going to say it if it is true. Congratulations. It's a win for all of us because we understand the loss that he suffered. But let him just come up and tell us. So is he on confirmed right now? It's just with speculation. They've not come out to say. So everybody is congratulating them and all of that. So on that note, let's take a break. Let's discuss mental health. Stay with us.