 Godfrey Mitubazi, Executive Director of Uganda Communications Commission, welcome to Geneva, welcome to WSIS Plus 10 high-level event. You've been involved in the high-level talks. Have they been productive? Have they been useful? Yes, they have been very useful in the sense that we get lots of different ideas coming up, the progress from different countries, challenges, so on and so forth. So it's been very useful. Now today is the conclusion of the talks and the conclusion is expected to be the endorsement by application of two key documents, as you know, the statement on implementation of outcomes and the WSIS Beyond 2015 vision. Do you think these documents are important? Yes, they are very much important, you know, inevitably we are seeing a lot of change. Our countries are moving towards semi-direction, digital revolution has taken over, spread of information on different platforms has really moved tremendously. So it's very important that these documents are endorsed and we move forward. And what difference do you think they'll make? Well, there are some countries, especially in Africa, that are slow, they are not moving at required pace. I think this is a wake-up call that really we must move on, we must wake up and start moving faster in regulation, implementation and other areas that require the development of information in developing countries. In Uganda, what are your priorities? You know the action lines from the outcome documents. Is it infrastructure, is it capacity, is it or a combination of all? It's a combination of all. We have infrastructure challenges, of course we have just established a national backbone and it connects most of the border posts, for example we connect with Kenya, with the Rwanda and soon with Tanzania and we have Sudan and we have the Congo to go. It's very important, the infrastructure itself needs to be stabilized, it's not very stable, it's very expensive. We are a landlocked country, we need the national backbone. Traditionally our borders depend on satellite, but satellite is so expensive. So we are really trying to develop the national backbone. Now at this point as we speak, there is what we call Northern corridor in East Africa, Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda and Southern Sudan are coming up with an infrastructure so that we can ease the flow of information, also bring the cost down. So there are a lot of things we are doing and of course we have also got challenges in the content which is not available, it's very expensive. The same applies to terminal equipment, hand pieces are very expensive, smartphones are very expensive, mindset just going to rural areas and start spreading all this technology is not easy. So those are the challenges we are facing. You mentioned surrounding countries, does taking part in the Worcesters process help you with that kind of collaboration, networking? Yes, yes, we have very able and dynamic countries, we have Rwanda, we have Kenya and Tanzania, we are very, very up one moving. If you look at the regulatory organization of those countries, they are a formal organization, it's very dynamic, we are working together in every area. We are trying to develop, as I said, infrastructure together and see how we can move. So the policies, we are trying to harmonize the policies to see how we can work together and make this industry much more, you know, development or dynamic as you would say. So yes, we have all these three countries, four countries together moving towards that goal. Okay, well thank you very much for being with us today, it's lovely to talk to you. Thank you so much, nice talking to you. Thank you.