 My name is Sarah Landau. I come from Uganda. I'm a member of the National National Association of Uganda and I'm the Vice Chairperson of the Village. I come from a settlement called Chimaka, Mijinja, and I have a settlement where I belong to called Amber Boat. It's called Bring Me Amber Boat. Just to share briefly what we do as a federation or as an organization, our major aim is to mobilize communities of mobilized people who study Islam into serving groups. The major agenda is to transform our sedatives. Looking at what has been before, it's like nobody seems to understand that we have a child in Islam so we have come up with a process of mobilizing ourselves into serving groups. Now, serving groups is just the start of our journey. As we mobilize people into serving groups, they come in big numbers, they come and build an agenda around their settlements. Discover that in a community, we have like four or five serving groups. These serving groups come together, they come to serve, and as they come to serve, they also discuss on issues that affect their settlement. In essence, they come up with identified challenges through data collection. And this is a process we are calling, knowing your city. So as you collect data, data concerning how many settlements, data concerning how many toilets, data concerning how many land titles that people have in their settlement, data concerning how much water taps they have, they have renails, they have all this information we have for ourselves. Now, it will surprise you to know that many of our cities know that their slums are part of cities, but they don't even have an agenda on how to transform their settlements because they are overwhelming and they seem not to understand it. They have a role to transform the settlement. So through SDI methodology, we are coming up to identify our challenges by collecting information that concerns us. First, before you transform any settlement, or you have any plan for any settlement, you must have a basis, and this is what we are calling data. So the data we collect is able to inform any development that takes place in our cities. An example of our city has changed. When we collected data in 2009, supported by City's Alliance on a program called Transforming Settlements, this data we worked it in conjunction with the local councils and we all agreed that it was a true data. In the end, we verified it together with them. They brought it up and they took it up as a serious data that should inform the implementation of slum upgrading in our settlements. So through this data, we are able to have opportunities, local governments, able to have a dialogue with local governments and all stakeholders, with the funds or the responsibility towards transforming our settlement in advance. So as I speak now, if we are to realize the outcomes of this agenda or the UN agenda towards sustainable cities, we should put in place actions that are really tangible and realistic. For example, you cannot leave the communities behind and you need to transform the communities. The outcome of this agenda will be realized from the communities themselves, meaning they cannot be left out. They have to work hand in hand with councils, work hand in hand with the communities, work hand in hand with all stakeholders in the government so as to transform our settlements and be able to realize the event that changed. Through this process, we are calling upon all stakeholders, all the municipalities, all the local leaders, the national governments, the international sectors, leaders and sets to join hands with whoever is in the settlements, whoever is in the city so that we all achieve city for all or inclusive cities through inclusive and participatory approach which will enforce the government in all cities. Without that, it would be difficult to really implement what we are calling the new energy.