 Kia ora everyone. I'm here to talk, we are here to talk to you about our favorite topic, which is about mana wahine. And it's about women power, yes? But it's more about balancing what we have in the world today, right? So we are from the island of Singapore and the island of Penang, Malaysia, where we live among indigenous Malays and immigrant Chinese, and Eurasians. We are a network of angels investing in women to help end poverty in this world. Now we don't look at angels as only angel investors, not the people with money, but the people, social entrepreneurs and the people who support them, they are also angels. So we are in the business of collecting angels. And my name is Laina, and this is Pat with me, and we're both Kohot Hiri-Piri, and we're here together with Audrey, who is Kohot Kawa-Kawa. And we are here united, looking very different, but united in a very common mission, and that is helping to end poverty in unity with women. So we are a network of angels, as I told you, and we're not all about exclusion. We're about inclusion, because we come from a part of the world where women have been very invisible, and they haven't been part of conversations about climate change and others. It's a very important component. So we have he-for-she's and she-for-she's. We actually have one of our angels here in the audience, Mama Rutan Yassan. Could you just stand up briefly? Yes, thank you. And we're together hoping to do this grand massive transformative purpose of ending poverty in unity with women. Why do we talk about poverty, and why are we talking about women? As you know, with the Sustainable Development Goals, poverty is number one. So in many ways, we see that poverty is the root cause of a lot of illnesses in the world. When you talked about deforestation, often it's at the edge where people are cutting down forests to be able to warm their homes or cook their meals or clean their waters, or they disperse toxic stuff into the rivers, like as they're making batik, for example, they put very toxic chemicals in the water. So it's very important to look at issues of poverty, and 70% of the poor are women. This is the data a lot of people don't realize. And yet women are the invisible infrastructures. They are the ones who walk for miles to carry water. They are the ones who do subsistence farming. They are the ones who take care of the elderly. They are the ones who do a lot. But when progress comes through, they are the ones who are often very excluded. So we'd like to be able to have that conversation of inclusion. Next one. We also see women as multipliers. Do you know for every one dollar a woman earns, up to 90% of her income goes back to her family and her community, because women are nurturous and healers. We had our previous speakers talking about what we need in the world today is a world of healing and nurturing. The other thing we found, thank you, and the other thing we found is that we have actually been very humbled in our journey because we've come across, everyone's heard about microenterprise and microfinance. And there's actually an unconscious bias today where people only give women small amounts of money. They're not given the money to scale and do great. And yet we've come across many, many amazing women who have, as we show in this little diagram, multitudes of people under them. We have social enterprises have 50,000 small holder farmers all across Indonesia, not only giving livelihood, preserving biodiversity and preserving culture. We have people working with 1,000 weavers under them and giving livelihood, saving girls from going into prostitution, going people into horrendous things. I mean, honestly, Audrey and I have been through, and Pat, we've gone through the journey of seeing their lives and seeing how painful their stories are. Next slide. So rather than just give you statistics, I think I really liked how Charles and Michelle talked about it, that we need to go back to the heart. And I really love Camden as well, who talked about love. So I hope in this story, we want to share with you a story of love and how as we love humanity, we need to love women. We need to love that feminine energy in our lives in men. We want to embrace that feminine energy in men as well. But here are some of the stories of our faces of women heroes. So many, many of them, I really can't get into all of them. So I'm just going to tell you the story of one of them. Okay, I think we just wanted to say that because Vanta in Cambodia, she made such good stories and impact the local community so much that we decided to actually fund her because she is so inspiring and she actually will create and make changes of the life. So this is just one of the social enterprises. Okay, basically, we're only focusing on sustainable fashion. And why New Zealand? I think we just wanted to say that because this is a female and a woman-friendly country and that we feel that we could help, we could learn and grow together and also able to help New Zealand to connect back into Asia, especially for women, social enterprise for New Zealand. And I think I wanted to say that we are actually hosting a session. Actually, I think, like Linus said, we are collecting more angels. And this is the topic is balancing the two wings. And we hope that you will join us if you share the same mission or if you want to support us as well. And this is a 3.30, right? Yeah, okay, that's it.