 I'll try to be very fast, just had a very long slide and it was very particular on how many slides, what are the sizes, so I have to scale down. So those are just some of the numbers of Kenya in terms of the population densities. These are some of the projects that we have done as the Federation of Slamdwellers. This is one of the settlements we did in situ upgrading. And if you see a lot of informal settlements in the city of Nairobi are still within the city boundaries, I think over a long period of time we have built resistance in terms of addressing, saying that even Slamdwellers, even poor people have a right to live within the city. So this is one of the projects that we did and it also addresses the issue that was raised by Gautam. We looked at the issues of housing just beyond the four walls. You look at the entire socio-economic activity. It also feeds on what Elias was saying, housing should be done by all. I think 15 years ago we had a very romantic idea that poor people can save money, do their own houses and we set up a small fund but then we realised we cannot be able to build a house for every Slamdweller in the city of Nairobi. So this is the Kambimoto project. So we also moved, there was a time people were talking about scale. This is the railway location project that we did. If you look at how people had built right next to the railway line and typically there was I think a train derailed, killed some people and the typical government response is how do we relocate these people and the plan was to relocate them 40 kilometres away from the city and then again it also, they didn't look at the, these are people who have been, these are communities who have been there for a very long time. The children go to school there, they do businesses there. So we intervened in this project and we started lobbying and the first thing we did was to do an enumeration of all the people who are living along the rail line and was to push the government to realise that there's an alternative way of addressing relocations apart from evictions. So we pushed for this and eventually, so this is the product. We had a project funded by the World Bank where we had 10,000 people who were facing evictions relocated to these houses. So this is another slide. So then the other projects that we are doing now and the discussion we are having now is everybody in the morning I think there's a lot of talk about Kibera but there's another slum which is right in the middle of industrial area with the public.