 Thank you very much, Hamadun, dear president, dear commissioners. First and foremost, I would like to start by thanking Denis for the wonderful hospitality and very generous hosting us here in Dublin. And yesterday I was thinking that I could hardly think of a better place to hold this ninth meeting of the Broadband Commission than Ireland, a country that combines tradition and modernity, and also that has a deep commitment for human rights and for sustainable development for all. I think that what is emerging is a shared vision. The Broadband Commission has become the global advocate for the deployment of broadband networks and services to spearhead economic growth and sustainable development. And our vision, I believe, is convincing because it goes beyond mere advocacy for broadband-enabled networks and services. It is the vision that broadband can be an accelerator for inclusive and sustainable growth by opening new paths to create and share knowledge, by widening learning opportunities, by enhancing freedom of expression. But this does not happen by itself. It requires will and leadership. And this is why this commission matters. We cannot just invest in technology. We must invest in an ecosystem. Technology by itself does not empower. This use and content does. This is why supporting infrastructure must be accompanied by support to applications and services, with investment in relevant content in local languages, drawing also on indigenous and traditional knowledge. This precise vision guided the Broadband Commission since its inception, and it has inspired the work of all of its working groups. Each working group already has published world-class cutting-edge reports, providing concrete data and analysis on the potential of broadband to pursue key agendas for sustainable development. I am pleased to lead the working group on education, the multilingualism, and I'm determined to take this forward. We are now entering a critical point of taking stock on the second millennium development goal, education for all. And this is also where the role of the Broadband Commission is critical in using everything that is within the possibilities of new technologies to spearhead to the maximum possible education for all by 2015. So in this period, I wish to welcome also our new commissioner. I know that she is not with us, the new executive director of UN Women, Ms. Pumzilem Lambo-Zuka, with whom I spent two weeks ago, much time in New York during the commission on the status of women. And we exchanged ideas also on how to accelerate the implication of the Broadband Commission also in the women's empowerment through broadband. We believe that to provide girls and women with new opportunities for quality learning is vital in this process. Girls and women's education is a breakthrough strategy for progress on all the millennium development goals for poverty eradication, for greater sustainability in development. And if what the president also said, we want to eradicate extreme poverty by 2030, and I think this should be also one of the goals of the Broadband Commission, we have to focus there where we make a difference. And I think the Broadband Commission came out to a difference in health, in education, in education of girls, which is one of the bottlenecks of this process. So I think that millennium development goals and everything that we start in terms of the sustainability for development in the future is vital if we want to reach the unreach and also if we want to enhance the quality of learning. And this was the key message that was sent last month when we at UNESCO hosted the Mobile Learning Week, one of the world's largest gatherings of governments, experts in the private sector to share how mobile technologies can advance quality education. And this was also one of the key topics debated last week at the Dubai Global Education and Skills forums, which was organized by UNESCO, the Dubai Care GEMS Foundation and the Ministry of Education of the United Arab Emirates, where we launched a global campaign, Business Bex Education, and I would like to invite all of you to join this global campaign. And where we also were speaking about the framework for business engagement in education that UNESCO prepared early on with the United Nations Global Compact. So now this is, I believe, a critical meeting that we are having now. We are standing less than a year and a half from the 2015 deadline of the Millennium Development Goal and also when the international community is shaping a new global sustainable development agenda to follow. Later this year, in the end of October, we have chosen to run the Mr. President in order to have our African consultations on the post 2015 agenda for education. And it was not by chance. It's not a secret that we highly value your commitment to education and to sustainable development. And I believe that the Broadband Commission has a major contribution to make to this agenda. But we must continue to make our case. We are not yet there to ensure that this work is reflected in the decisions taken on post 2015 agenda to shape a very ambitious agenda that makes the most of Broadband and new ICTs as accelerators of inclusive and sustainable goals. So in this spirit, I would like to thank all the commissioners, particularly the co-chairs, President Kagame, Carlos Slim. Please transmit our deep appreciation and I know his commitment and also to you, Hamidun, for the leadership. Thank you.