 President-elect Martili, welcome to CSIS. Coming into office, you have very little time to confront some very serious challenges and also some opportunities that are coming your way with donors and also new initiatives that people in Haiti are ready for. What do you consider your top three priorities, coming into office? First of all, thank you Steve for having me and I want to thank the members of CSIS. And I will tell you that we've been caught by surprise. At first we had identified the cholera issue as a priority, as an urgency. We had identified the relocation of the people under the tents as a priority. And things are changing. Now the price of the fuel is going up, so we have to get ready for a crisis, an increase in food crisis as the price of the products are going high in the international market. The price of oil is going up and it's like things are changing on us. So we are planning on, we are actually talking to our importers. We are working on cutting the tax that we perceive on these products. And the cholera remains an issue because if we don't focus on it then it will spread again. And as another issue we have the people living under those tents. It's been over 14 months and they are still living under the tents. And not much is being done. And I believe if a little bit was done we would have seen progress because some of these tents are fake tents. People are using these tents to make business. They come when there is food distribution. They come when they are about to promise a land to a tent owner. And whenever the organizations in charge of that live, they live too. But way before the earthquake, lodging, housing was an issue. And it's going to be one of our priority. Education is another priority for us as we have identified ignorance as a vector who produce, who generate poverty. So it will be very important for us to bring, to finally bring our kids to school. The constitution predicts, mandates free schooling. But unfortunately our past leaders have never tried to implement. So I think it's a responsibility that I have as I understand the need for every child to go to school. And the last one will be the agriculture reform that we need to do. We'll be creating wealth, we'll be bringing food security. We'll be stopping that migration toward the big cities. We'll be opening a window on decreasing importation. So these are the aspects that have been, the theme that I've been campaigning on. But we must remember that everything else remains a priority in Haiti, starting from clean water, security, land title, and so on, the state of law. Transparency, eradicating corruption. These are issues that we must address as we need, we understand the need to rebuild that confidence to build that confidence back between the people of Haiti and the government itself. And confidence between Haiti and its partners is very important to do that. Even rebuilding that confidence should be a priority. Well that's a lot of responsibility to rest on your shoulders as well as the shoulders of the members of your administration. But at the same time you have quite a bit of talent in the Haitian people. What strengths do you think the people of Haiti bring to this task of moving forward? Well I think this is the greatest opportunity that we have because the people of Haiti are directly implicated this time. They have voted in mass because they wanted a rupture with state or traditional politics that have shown no results. And because of that, now they feel like they have fought that fight. They have won. They have overthrew a system who is a failed system. And now they are already taking to the streets and cleaning the streets. They are waiting for orders. They want to implicate themselves. They are willing to suffer. They are willing to move out of tents. They are willing to move out of neighborhoods. They understand that most of the decisions we will have to take are not going to be popular measures and they are willing to suffer because they identify in this new leader that I am, a light at the end of the tunnel. And because of that I believe they are going to play a very important role. And I have campaigning telling them that I was going to count on them as much as they do count on me. And together and with our partners, with the international community, behind one dream, all this weight that you have identified on my shoulder, it will remain a weight but it will be easier for us to succeed. Mr. President-Elect, thank you so much for visiting us this afternoon at CSIS. Thank you so much and no need to tell you that I will be expecting CSIS expertise also for us to succeed. Thank you. My pleasure.