 So we have 37 minutes left. I want to make sure that we have some time for people sitting in the room to be able to raise questions. So what I'd like to do now, if it's possible, is really to ask each of you a question which I'd like, if it's possible, to answer it very quickly in two minutes, if you could. And the first question I have is for you, Madam Thuray, which is you heard this vision of multiple frameworks and coexisting. In some ways, you have some of that already. From your point of view, would that be a good outcome or would that be a bad outcome? Well, definitely. I spent now some years in the multilateral organization. I was a former UN personnel for many years. I went back to government. And I came out of this process thinking that you need frameworks, for sure. You need many frameworks. And I always speak from the point of view of Africa now, I mean, after having been global now, focusing on Africa, the richest continent, by the way, by any means, and the poorest. So whatever framework that we'll deal with that issue, we're going to be part of it first. Second, I'm more interested in, I think that's the feeling in the continent that we have to take business into our own hands. How to strengthen African Union, how to make sure that we are self-interest driven because that's how the world works. We are going to be more forward-coming in terms of defending our interests, being very strong on whatever issues and making our own points. I appreciate it when you talk about forcing some countries to take part. That was the case for the Russia-Ukraine war and most of African countries look at it as a white man's war somehow and just didn't take it in a position and that's how it's right, like everybody does. But I think the questions that need to be reflected upon is how are we going to make sure that we move forward peacefully, peacefully to a more equal order, an order that respects the environment, that put women also on an equal footage, nobody brought the issue of inequalities and making sure that young people are part of it and that we need for the corporations, I think that's very important to bring that upon, to look beyond profit because we are a profit-driven world as we speak. So it's not enough anymore. So do we want to go through changes by revolution or do we want to be smarter and put in place equal frameworks where true discussion comes out of what we want to build for the future? Every time I come in this country, in the Emirate, I remember that Dubai 100 years ago was a small Bedouin village. So how did change occur? It means that it's possible. It means that you can accelerate change and then you can have a more sane discussion because we are having an insane discussion because you do have a pool of very wealthy group of countries in front of very poor countries, but within those countries you do also have that huge gap. I was visiting south of Senegal in the mining areas just before I came. It was terrible. You do have very big mining companies taking gold out of the country and they were not even capable of building a decent road because they don't care about it. They just have an airport, they can fly a private jet, it looks like the world we are in. So how are we going to take a pause and then come back to what the United Nations was supposed to be as a promise and share the common interests as human beings? Other than that, people are what I'm seeing now very much even within the intellectual elite is let's focus on our own interests as the rest of the world is doing. Human rights, okay, we can talk about it very globally but it's not a reality, so that's how we look at it. So what are the solutions that we want to come up with that are human rights-centered, that are equal and preserve the environment beyond just the idea of pursuing profit? Thank you very much. So a very clear message that you want to be clear about your own interests and engage in multiple conversations, multiple frameworks but be clear about what is to the benefit of the continent and organize yourselves in a way to better represent those interests. And in that context, I assume that you and many leaders in Africa would welcome the decision about making the African Union part a permanent member of the G20 because I think that in some ways is one forum where that could happen.