 I will jump in with the question about hybrid war. Can you tell a little bit more and speak especially about information war? Do you still have the media in Russia? Well, Georgia is actually one of these real places where we don't have Russian media outputs. We have several, actually, but they are not the major ones or broadcasting nationwide. They are mostly on the internet-based. But at the same time, I want to say that a lot of Russian opposition outlets, bloggers and so on are operating from Georgia. Thank you very much. Can I ask the same question to Kazakhstan and to Moldova about hybrid threats and about information war? I think Moldova, you closed the talk show in Russia, but not all kind of destruction or broadcasting. It's true. Some Russian channels are still available in Moldova, but not the news bullet sense. However, what poses a bigger challenge is the so-called homegrown disinformation when Russian proxies in Moldova own TV channels to propagate their narrative about the war. So currently, the statistics show that around 30 percent of population sees Russia's war against Ukraine through the prism of Russian propaganda, which, of course, we spend no effort to counter, including looking at the media ownership and putting stricter controls in place. Thank you, Olga. What about you, Mr. Vasiliy, about your country? Yeah, in Kazakhstan, we do have Russian channels available, but so is Euronews and so is BBC, so CNN. But I will tell you that in Kazakhstan, the media itself works in Kazakh, but also Russian languages, in addition to 10 other languages of some other ethnic groups, such as Germans, who live in Kazakhstan. So the challenge for us is to strengthen the informational independence, if you will, and to strengthen the resilience and the professionalism and the appeal of the Kazakh own media. Thank you very much.