 The federal government has been all surprised by the well-being of its citizens, particularly year-in-paired individuals, due to the high cost and accessibility of year-in-aids. Dr. Ola Lika Makin, the CEO of the Oli Shagon Ambassador Foundation, announced that the foundation will provide no fewer than 2,000 year-in-aids to people free of charge. It also allows the government to subsidize the cost of year-in-aids as a deriola or Lopadi or Lopadi, founder of the Air Care Foundation for Africa, Asia, holds the policy makers to prioritize access for newborn year-in-screening programs. There are people made during an outreach event, Makin at 2024 World Year-In-Aid, and the 87th birthday celebration from a president of Barcelona. To raise this opportunity to reach out to them, the year-in-aid people, divide many services, check their hearing, do or do auditory, some of their ABS ranging and all that. Many year-care takes place, and for those that need hearing aids, we have separated them. Already on ground, we have about, not even one thousand, 2,000 hearing aids here available on ground for this mission, and we are hoping to give out everything before the end of this mission. So this is one of the ways of giving back to the people, helping them to get what they really need, but they cannot afford to. Currently, across the world, there are over 430 million people that have hearing loss. And in Africa, that is a third, which is actually a big number that is coming to us in Africa. And currently, we do not have access to a standard hearing test, let alone hearing aids, which are very expensive. Also, we do not have what we call newborn screening hearing programs in African nations. I know nations like Zambia and Kenya, but it is very hard to actually have a standardized newborn hearing screening program which actually enables for us to identify children once they are born that they have a hearing loss.