 Thank you very much for having me here. As you know, for the past 27 years, it has been very, very difficult for the UPU to increase its budget based on the zero nominal growth. Apart from the decisions that were made in Abidjan that added some money to the provident scheme, that had never happened. So consistently it had become very difficult for the union to fund its various programs based on the business plan that had been laid out in Abidjan. So the biggest challenge was to get members to go back to decide against the zero nominal growth principle, to open up the ceiling, to enable the union, to have additional resources to fund programs that would make the UPU more fit for purpose and to serve its members in a more effective way in a very competitive, globalized e-commerce world. The outcome of the Congress, I can say, was very positive. Some of the major topics such as opening up of the UPU to the wider postal stakeholders, all the proposals that had been presented were approved. Apart from the fact that the funding of the experts who were supposed to shaper on those processes could not be provided through the regular budget. There has been however commitments from a number of countries to fund the climate action plan and therefore I can confidently say that coupled with the decisions we made this morning to increase the budget at least by 1.6 percent that would give the union an additional almost 680,000 Swiss francs to fund programs in the emergency solidarity fund as well as strengthening the UPU's IB cybersecurity capacity to deal with issues of cybersecurity. I can positively say that the outcome of the extraordinary Congress has been very, very successful. Ideally I would have been a lot happier if we had increased the budget by the 4.7 percent that had been provided in proposal one because that would have given the union 1.8 million additional Swiss francs to fund programs under workstream A and workstream B. If we had passed that specific option then we would have actually had surplus to focus on strengthening the human resource capacity of the IB to deal with these very emerging demands from member countries. However, what we have gotten today is focusing on two major projects that the IB will be undertaking that is the one on cybersecurity and the one on the emergency solidarity fund. We were informed that in the last 10 years out of 70 emergencies that were reported the UPU was only able to deal with about 22 which literally is 34.1 percent of the challenges that were facing the member countries in terms of pandemics, typhoons and earthquakes and so on and so forth. And therefore these resources will make it possible for the union to react and respond with more agility and in a timely manner to help countries that are faced by disasters to respond very, very quickly in rebuilding the apostle infrastructure to serve the global community. On the side of cybersecurity you recall yesterday and even in Abidjan we had intermittent interruptions on the wifi and internet connectivity. So if we can bolster the capacity of the UPU to strengthen its cybersecurity surveillance and management systems you should make it possible for us to get our documents in good time not to lose any time during discussions which could then hamper our progress as a union.