 We're here at ITU Telecom World 2015 in Budapest, Hungary and I'm very pleased to be joined by Floras Gaudry-Perkins, who is the International Director for Government Affairs for Al-Ted Lucent. For us, thank you very much for being in the studio with us today. It's a pleasure. Thank you. Now, I'd like to start off by talking about your participation in the third advisory board meeting of the Empowering Development Initiative, ITU's extremely important initiative, and perhaps you could tell us why you are participating in this initiative and why it is important to Al-Ted Lucent. Well, this whole subject, I mean, the Empowering Board is trying to address a little bit the content issue is once we've solved, or we hopefully will solve in the years to come, the infrastructure challenges that we still have, which is coverage and of course affordability, then we need to be, of course, working in parallel on what we're going to do with this infrastructure because this mobile revolution that we are undergoing is offering incredible possibilities in terms of the information we're going to be able to provide in all sorts of fields, you know, to people. And so it's very important to be working on this in parallel. It's complicated because it requires many, many fields to come together, it requires a lot of cross-sector work. And so it's a very important, I think, initiative in that respect because I think there cannot be enough initiatives to try to make that happen because it's a complicated thing. Now Empowering, of course, can cover a number of things. I know that you've mostly focused on health matters. How can we link mobile technologies to improve health, especially in developing countries? Mobile health is a subject that I am particularly passionate about and one that I've invested and that we've invested as a company, energy, and in the past five years. And again, the ubiquity of mobile devices, especially in the hands of people who don't have access to health services as readily, which is rural zones or less developed countries where there's less health infrastructure and doctors per se, all of a sudden this connectivity and this tool that's in everyone's pocket becomes something extremely powerful in terms of many, many aspects actually of health, whether you're dealing with prevention, whether you're dealing with supply chain of medication, whether you're dealing with getting advice, for example, through teleconferencing to someone who may not have a possibility to have access to a doctor, but there's many things like medical adherence. There's many proven models out there that have shown incredible impact on what it can do to health in particular. And what are the main challenges for furthering the use of mobile technologies in health and for sustainable development in general? There are quite a few still. It's a field that's been around for probably over 10 years now, but we are plagued with what we commonly refer to in the field of mobile health by pilotitis, although we're starting to move a little bit beyond that because there are some projects that have shown some promise of scaling somewhat. We really, really have this challenge still to conquer. The sustainability factor of working out also business models is not so simple. The biggest challenge of all to me is, again, the complexity of the field and the number of the pieces of the puzzle that have to come together. Even in the technology field, it's very fragmented. There are many pieces that need to come together. And getting the technology field to work with the health sector is a complicated matter I've found. We've been working on some multi-stakeholder projects in a few countries, and to me that has been the most difficult thing. It hasn't been so hard actually to, well, it's been hard enough, but to get, say, a health insurance company to work with, telecom operators to work with a pharma company, but where I find the silos to be the most difficult to break have been actually in government, to ensure that the Ministry of Communication works hand-in-hand with the Ministry of Health. And that really is not easy, I have found, from an operational standpoint. And as an ambassador for the Empowering Development Initiative, is there a message that you'd like to share with us? Well, where I'm really hoping this initiative is going to be able to perhaps make a difference and accelerate things is where actually ITU has a great reach, which is to the Ministries of Communication. And I think that they're still, as I said, one of the biggest challenges is getting the Ministry of Communication to work in an intersectorial manner with other ministries. So I'm really hoping that what we can help do with this initiative is really push that message and help accelerate that. Well, it's going to be perfect. Thank you very much indeed. Thank you very much.