 As a Western reporter, I was never given a visa to enter Syria. So we developed close contacts with people on the ground, civil society groups that we trusted. Doctors, nurses, teachers, people who were really stuck between these two warring sides and people who were increasingly terrified as the government advanced on East Aleppo. This was an absolutely horrific time where you had more than 100,000 civilians trapped and documenting it as it unfolded and getting desperate messages from people who were genuinely in fear of their lives and trying to tell that story was just a very overwhelming and harrowing experience. The hardest part about doing the Yemen story was just getting in. So difficult. Access is very restricted. We waited for months to get those visas and the local authorities don't make it any easier because we were trying to show the war crimes, alleged war crimes committed by both sides. On the ground, I mean, this is a place that's been hit by airstrikes. Kidnapping is a high risk. On the roads we travelled, we were 20 kilometres from a front where ISIS was. Poverty is just so incredibly overwhelming and just to meet these families whose kids are dying because they just don't have enough food to feed them. I feel that what we do is really important and we always strive to be the ones who are there bringing that story home for both the audience and for the powers that be. Yes, it is incredibly beneficial now to have social media and get stories and videos from people on the ground, people who you trust, but I still think that there's an important role for our correspondents' play in gathering that information, presenting it to the audience, providing that analysis of what it means and being able to vouch for that, verify it and say, this is what's going on in this place. Even if we can't get in there, we've done our best to try and show you what is going on. Thank you.