 WRC 19, the World Radio Communication Conference, is being held this year in Egypt in Shama Sheikh. WRC 19 is an event that brings together around 3,000 delegates from all over the world. Mario Manovich is the Director of the Radio Communication Bureau at ITU. He's agreed to jump on a security buggy with me and ride around the venue, giving us an insight into this conference from his perspective. This is the largest event of the ITU in general and of course it's the most important one for the ITUR, the Radio Communication Community. This is an international treaty that binds all the countries of the world and it encompasses all the regulatory framework of the radio communications, meaning the use of the spectrum, the satellite orbits and everything that has to do with all the wireless services. Who's here? Who comes down to this conference? Who's making the decisions here? So we have 160 countries that are attending here, but we have also representatives from the industry, meaning the operators, the manufacturers, also scientific organizations, international organizations that are interested as well as research organizations and the academia. Well let's have a little wonder in, this is one of the rooms here that all the conversations are happening in. So this room is the biggest one of the center. It's called the capital room and we have 3,000 seats. So this is the main plenary room. So this is where all decisions are being taken in the last instance, as well as the opening ceremony and the closing ceremony. And as you can see, each country has a nameplate. Each one of these member states, however large or small, has got an equal say in what's being decided? Absolutely. If we went to a vote, all countries would have one vote. The biggest one and the smallest one. But in ITU, the tradition is that we don't go to votes. So this period of consensus is what prevails. So we don't vote and we just try to work and work even if it's until late hours at night to get to build some these consensus and to get these consensus. Do they always go home happy? No. That's part of the spirit of compromise. That means that nobody gets everything he wants. But it's very difficult that you get nothing of what you want. So everybody gets something and we say that normally the solutions that we arrive at at the end for the tricky topics are those that make everybody equally unhappy. Or equally happy.