 Welcome to Geneva, for which is from 2019, where I am joined by Mr. Innocent Paganba Mouhisi, his Chief Executive Officer of the Rwanda Information Society Authority. Thank you very much for joining us. Thank you for having me. Now you're here to present a workshop about your country's efforts to become a digital society and economy. So what do you stand currently in this journey? Thank you, Shad, for having me. To be able to explain where we stand currently, maybe somebody needs to give you a little bit of history of where we're coming from. Rwanda embarked on the digital journey about almost 20 years ago, the year 2000, when the Rwanda Vision 2020 was enacted at that time. Then alongside the Vision 2020 decision was made to inculcate information technology as an enabler. And we had a 20-year plan, which was broken down into four or five-year plans. So the very first five years were to lay down the enabling environment, setting up the institutional framework, setting up all the legal requirements to be able to start digitizing the whole process. Now the second batch of five years was to lay down infrastructure, fiber-optic cables starting to build national data centers and what have you. Now the third batch of five years was not to start to build services on top of the infrastructure that had been laid, but also to expand the infrastructure. So right now we're in the last batch of five years, which we have transformed into what is called Smart Rwanda master plan, where a number of services have been digitized. Like for example, if you want to get your birth certificate, you know, a Murray certificate and others. Taxes are being paid now online, procurement services for government are conducted online, and a number of other services that were enacting. So that's where we are today. Tell us about connectivity in your country, because obviously connectivity is a big theme, because we're talking here, this is for a lot about innovative technologies and so on, but for that to happen, first you need connectivity, right? So where do you stand currently on that front? So about close to ten years ago we started on this project to lay fiber-optic cables around the whole country. I'm happy to say that today we are sitting over more than 7,000 kilometers of fiber that has been deployed within the country, where each and every border of the country has been covered, each and every district of the country has been covered, but over and above that we deployed a 4G LTE network, where Rwanda currently is the first African country to have over 95% geographical coverage of 4G LTE across the whole country. So that's where we are today in terms of coverage. We literally have almost the whole country covered in terms of connectivity, but that does not necessarily mean that access has been completed 100%. So we are still hooking onto different citizens, different institutions, different organizations onto this network that we have within the country. It's a work in progress. It's still a work in progress, yes, but we are quite advanced. Now, I understand it's the first time you are attending with these forums, so how are you finding it so far? It's quite interesting, very interesting, because it's somehow different from other conferences that I've attended, where you have specific country workshops, where you have specific sessions that are going on. So this is quite different and quite learning a lot. Would you come back? Will you come back? Oh, definitely I will. Yes, definitely I will come back. Of course, there are a number of things that you hear, for instance, learning what other countries are doing, learning of new innovative technologies that are coming out, new standards that you have to adapt and implement in your respective jurisdictions. So there are a lot of things that one stands to learn, and I think we'll be coming back. Innocent by Ngambamuhizi. Thank you very much. Thank you.