 Welcome to Geneva and WSIS Forum 2022. With me is Gitanjali Shah, who is strategy and policy coordinator for the ITU. Welcome. What are your reflections on this week's forum? Thank you, Sam. It's a pleasure to be here. Well, this week's WSIS Forum is the final week of the process we started on the 15th of March. So we've had more than 250 workshops since then. We've had more than 30,000 people joining us. And in this concluding week, we saw more than 1000 people here in Geneva with us. It was wonderful to meet old friends, old faces. Some of the new people we met during these virtual Zoom meetings. And it was such a pleasure to see them and be with them to concretize some of the things we were working on. For instance, we started with WHO, our work on alignment with the decade of healthy aging, the ICTs and older persons track. With the UN Technology Bank, our ICTs and least developing countries track. So all of it was a great success. We are very happy with the outcomes. We had more than 40 ministers here, more than 250 high levels here. So it was an amazing atmosphere. It was wonderful to get back to, you know, your community, to see them face to face and to continue our work. So we've got a huge mandate. So there were lots of outcomes. We need to concretize those outcomes and start working on them now. And as you sort of mentioned there, this is a UN process. How are the UN involved? So the WISIS is a UN process, like you rightly said. We work with more than 32 UN agencies to implement this process. And different WISIS action lines that form the framework of the WISIS process are implemented by different UN agencies. So for instance, ITU is responsible for Action Line C2 on ICT infrastructure, C5 on cybersecurity and C6 in enabling environment. And now more and more on C4, Action Line C4 capacity building. So we just finished with a United Nations Group on Information Society meeting where we concluded that, you know, the onges within the WISIS process remains a very strategic and important digital component within the UN system-wide coordination. So WISIS has its relevance as a multi-stakeholder process since its inception. So we have been working on the inclusion of older persons, of women, of youth. We had the WISIS gender trendsetters who came out with their pledges for digital gender inclusion. So, you know, this whole momentum, it's just so vibrant. And we are now looking forward to implementing all these activities that came for during the physical week. And we look forward to working with all the stakeholders. And I've been really struck by how enthused the prize winners have been by that recognition from the WISIS forum, really important to them. Yes, yes, the prize winners have been really benefiting from this international recognition that they've been getting from the UN. In 2018 or 19, we visited a prize winner winning project in a village in Thailand. And it was amazing to see how the, you know, the village's economy has benefited from winning the prize. And it was, the project was about provision of internet in a village and how the village has benefited from internet. So it's really amazing. And, you know, the whole commitment of the entire stakeholder community, the technical community, governments, private sector, civil society, this year we had tremendous engagement from the academia, from the mayors, they were a new component, we're looking at how smart cities and mayors could be involved in this UN process. So several new things, new additions, highlighting the fact on how WISIS action lines can help achieve the advancement of the sustainable development goals. It's been really great to see that collaboration and the results of what you do actually, you know, in practical use. Gitanjali Shah, thank you so much for joining us. Thank you.