 Good morning, Mr. Carlos Slim, co-chair of the Broadband Commission, vice-co-chairs of the Broadband Commission, Dr. Madun Ture and Ms. Serena Bokova, distinguished members of this commission. Ladies and gentlemen, it is my pleasure to be with you as we once again meet to assess our progress in advancing the commission's broadband agenda. It is clear we have to invest more in broadband because it accelerates economic growth and impacts positively the lives of many. Looking forward, the commission's work should focus on strengthening policy orientations that make broadband university accessible. For example, we have found that the model whereby private operators build parallel infrastructure and compete to provide services in a few decorative geographical areas is problematic. It duplicates network deployment costs, hampers economies of scale and affects accessibility and affordability of services. A better model is one that presents broadband as an efficiently built and shared utility. This is the kind of model that we have adopted in my country, Rwanda. The government of Rwanda and Korea Telecom have established a joint venture which will build and operate one single wholesale 4G LTE nationwide network to be accessed by all retail broadband service providers on an open access basis. We believe this will accelerate rollout and affordability of broadband services for Rwandans beyond 2015. The effort should be to unleash the smart use of broadband. It is one thing to have the infrastructure and the tools in place. It is another to use them in a profitable manner. We need to use broadband more to enhance delivery of services in education, healthcare, banking and other sectors. Broadband should also empower young people in the developing world to innovate and be more competitive globally. Let me conclude by thanking the commissioners for your continued efforts and commitment to the broadband agenda. Thank you and look forward to an interesting and productive discussion today. Here I pass on to Co-Chair Carlos Lee.