 Distinguished guests, participants, delegates, ladies and gentlemen, it's delight, galore, and there is a humble sense of achievement with the Sartla Secretary, with more staff. And in a way, we will take a leap towards the institutionalization of Sartla. We also had several global alliances. We had alliance with UNDP, with UNAIDS, with UNSCAP. We had collaboration with IDLO International Development Law Organization based out of Rome. We went ahead with several workshops, studies, seminars, roundtables, producing several research reports, so on and so forth. And even with ADB, we had made a couple of consulting projects at the moment. So this made us go beyond the domain of Sartre region, or the walls of Sartre region. We became truly a global organization. Becoming a global organization, apart from a regional organization, did not vouch for that. We tied up with one of our regional ethics bodies, SAIWAK, South Asian Initiative, to involve us against children. Dr. Rintian Chopu, the Director General of SAIWAK, is present here, and I must commend his efforts in bringing the issues connected with children and women to the limelight in the Sartre region. I think now close my address because there is limitation of time. And in any case, never ever, anybody from the audience has ever sort of objected or protested against the short speech. But before I close my address, I would like to give a little piece of advice to all the young lawyers sitting here, including some law students, which is that you must watch a Hollywood movie called 12 Years a Slave. It's a beautiful movie which is based on an incredible true story of a man's struggle for liberty, freedom, and survival. I will beat up one little dialogue from that movie. The righteous path may be long, may have some hardships, but that eventually takes you to the most desirable destination. So never ever lose sight of a righteous path, whether it be your personal life or it be your professional life. I wish you at the end of two days of amazing deliberations, discussions, and confessions. Thank you very much, Mr. Bhatia. Thank you much for your wishes. And of course for the brief overview on those great endeavors and of course for those words of wisdom and the spirit that you wish to pass on. Thank you very much once again. Ladies and gentlemen, we've been witness that over the years the region has seen an upsurge in cases of, cases related to women, relating to violence, and then there are other, those extended violence. However these arise in meaningful initiatives and participation has also been comparatively encouraging in parallel to that, though inadequate if I may add it here. And it's a pleasure, rather an honour for us today that we are launching one such endeavor today. It's my pleasure, ladies and gentlemen. I wish you at national conscience and values in their respective countries. Geography has made us neighbors and we must live in harmony bound by the values of the private rights and the public justice. Thus the relevance and the need for the Saab law are most imperative and I respectfully and earnestly wish that the Saab law continue to intensify its global efforts, noble efforts with our individual countries within the region and assume the globalist world with our friends and organisations like ADB, Saab, UNDP and other great organisations. Saab law continues and its conference has become a sacred forum for the honourable justice and the legal communities of the region to share the profound wisdom, creating a repository of knowledge that celebrates our glorious past and remind us of our commitment to future in words, deeds and spirit. Let me elaborate a bit on this by bringing up matters that concern most of us. For instance, almost all the countries of South Asia have parted right in their respective prostitutions. However, South Asia is yet to establish a common defence system for preventing or redressing the abuse of our rights. Whereas countries in Europe, America and Africa have evolved common institutional defence mechanism at the Saab or Saab law level, we will hesitate to seriously discuss the desirability and possibility of bringing out the regional human rights Saab law, let alone the Human Rights Commission or the Tribunal. The establishment of common alternative dissolution forum for South Asia is still on. Frankly speaking, we do not have strong interface between law and politics. A common legal design resonating to human rights was created to usher in overall economic, social and political integration in the Saab region. South Asia is a region where people are bound by common socio-economic, cultural and educational ties. The unity of this decade, all of us bear freedom and dignity. However, the institutions created for promoting the system and promoting South Asia can play a catalytic role in addressing the challenge to freedom and democracy, and is here oscillating to newer heights. To my mind, the legal and judicial community should need an judicial operation. A mediating destitution by giving law to poverty alleviation, infringement of peace, facilitation of trade and commerce will be rewarded. Regional approach on matters such as legal education, protection of intellectual property rights, panjabation and so forth.