 First of all, good afternoon everybody and thank you very much Terry for hosting me here today and to such a distinguished audience from policy makers, to intellectuals, from business community. I hope that this session will be useful and informative for you so I would make myself very brief in my remarks and give more time for the Q&A in order to address any of the questions or anything to be clarified from my side. And I would like also to thank the government of Morocco for making this gathering happen and hosting all this number of people which we had the honour to host last year in Doha. World Policy Conference has become one of the most important events in the world of policy and international affairs. I just wanted to start today with one very simple question here why the Middle East is an important region. For ages, the Middle East was the source of civilisations, was the root of languages and the origin of different faith, it was the international trade hub where it was connecting east to west and the west to east where the people can connect and can engage. And the key word for this was the coexistence and the engagement of people from different backgrounds from different ethnicities. Now the situation is termed and reverted, unfortunately we don't want this to revert to the dark ages where we have, where we before used to be the source of enlightenment, we don't want to become the source of turbulence for the world. I believe most of the international challenges now are happening in that region, in the Middle East where you have a different ongoing conflicts from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Yemen, a humanitarian catastrophe there, Libya, a turbulent situation where it's spilling over everywhere in Europe and in Africa and the sub-Sahara area, the issue which is still ongoing in Iraq and unfortunately the most horrifying situation in the recent history what's happening now in Syria where it's a continuous seven years of conflicts. And this conflict which was just started with a decent demand from the normal people asking for justice, asking for their rights, asking for some reforms and unfortunately they were confronted with military action and bombardment and now the situation has changed from the people situation and the crisis of people to a crisis of terrorism, a crisis of extremism. In all of we are going to look at all those conflicts we will find there are different narratives. And normally they are using the religion as a scapegoat for those narratives but if we are going to look at all of them we will find one common theme here. And the common theme is that those who want power, who seek power always create crisis. When we are looking at one example of Syria as I've just mentioned here we see that the government want to preserve power that's why they are creating the crisis of people where more than 500,000 people being killed, more than 12 million being displaced and all this is just for the sake of power, for the sake of power. The extremism are just nurturing there because of to achieve an influence there. It's not, they are not having the religion as the vision to achieve a religious state. Their vision is a political vision. They are using the religion here as a scapegoat for them to achieve this political vision. So it is all about game of power, game of influence here. Now the same theme which is applied everywhere. We see that the most stable and the most promising region in the Middle East was the Gulf countries where it has been the center of stability. It was the role model and the example for the cooperation in the collective security to achieve one common objective to maintain the security of the region and to have more prosperous future and more economic, better economic integration for the future of the people. This is, I'm sure everybody will recognize that I'm talking about the Gulf region which was just like this before few months ago. When a crisis started out of nothing without any basis, we have seen suddenly that the Gulf countries, the GCC as an organization and specifically Qatar has becoming to the front page of every and each media outlet talking about the Middle East. A crisis which is happening in one of the most stable regions which is happening in a region which is considered the source of energy in the world when it comes to oil, to LNG, to economic prosperity. A region which is really situated in very complicated neighborhood. It's just turning to another crisis within the same region. What are the motives of those crises? If I'm going to ask anyone here, everybody is going to talk about different motives. Even me, who is the foreign minister of Qatar whom I should know very well what is the reason of this crisis. I cannot give you a clear answer because I cannot judge and I cannot assess on behalf of others. I cannot stay guessing on behalf of countries which they are not willing to talk to me yet. This crisis, it's all started with a cyber attack. No one can imagine the effect and the spillover of the cyber crimes which is now becoming a phenomenon everywhere in Europe, in the United States, in Asia and now in the GCC. There is something wrong, ongoing, with all those conflicts. Why the international system couldn't solve and couldn't prevent any of those crises from happening? Aren't we in the age of preventive diplomacy? Aren't we in the age of engagement and dialogue? Or we are just reverting back to the age of confrontation, to the age of different war? Qatar has been always calling for dialogue for different conflicts. Qatar has been always acted as a platform for peace, as a peace broker. Qatar has brokered more than 10 peace deals in this region because we believe in dialogue. We believe that engagement is the best way forward to provide a solution for any crisis. Although the crisis has been created for those who seek power, but we believe that dialogue is the best way forward. There is another failure in the international system we found that cannot address the needs of the civilians and the protection of the civilians from becoming part of any political conflict. When we see that the civilians cannot be protected in different conflict zones, in Syria, in Yemen, in Libya, and now in Qatar. Although it's not the same difficulties our people are facing, the same difficulties which are faced by the Syrians or the Yemeni or the Libyans or the Iraqi, but they are facing some difficulties when their family is teared up because of a political conflict. When we have more than 26,000 human rights violations, it is a serious thing to provide a protection. It is our role and our obligation as a government to provide a protection for our own people. So, why there is nothing and there is no mechanism in the international order in the 21st century to prevent this from happening? Why there is no any enforcement mechanism to protect our people, the Qatari people, the Syrian people, the people of the world, to protect the humanity from such escalation? So, I believe this is a very important global challenge which I hope that such a gathering here for different politicians and different intellectuals come up with some recommendations for the international community to come together and really to face and confront the law of force to the force of law, to empower the law enforcement mechanisms, to empower the system itself in order to prevent and to protect our people. I don't want to take much time explaining about our situation, but we believe that our situation is just similar to the other situations. Yes, it's not on the same level and we hope to never reach this level of tension and we hope that it will be recovered and solved very soon, not because we see that there are a lot of challenges within, but the challenges is really facing the entire region and we believe that this region cannot afford more crises. So, if we are talking about a region which is not affording an additional crisis, we are talking about a needless crisis without any foundation and we hope that the wisdom one day will prevail and the countries who are trying to avoid the engagement, avoid talking, avoid addressing any of the security concerns which is our security concern if it's the same claim they are claiming. And come to the table and solve the issue. We have to learn from history. We cannot learn by experience. The entire world witnessed the same conflicts, the same crises everywhere and took years and years and at the end, none of them has been solved in a battlefield, none of them has been solved in a confrontation, all of them being solved around the table and we hope that all the crises in the Middle East will be solved around the table. Thank you.