 Hi, I'm Eva, I'm from the Red Queen Alliance in Denmark. Here in Denmark we've been living under emergency measures since March 12th and with pretty good results, it seems. The number of deaths are less than 400 and the capacity in the hospital seems to be okay. So now the country is slowly opening up. For me that means for example that my daughter started school on Wednesday. Along with all the lower grades and my two sons, they get to start kindergarten on Monday. I still work from home like most public employees, so it was very lucky to even get a spot. Demands are definitely higher than the capacity right now. One of the big debates right now in Denmark has to do with ownership of vaccine production. In Denmark the Social Democratic government sold off our nationally owned, state owned vaccine production in 2016. With the votes of of course the right wing, but also the Greens. It means of course now that we can't control production, but it also means a public loss of a minimum of 200 million euros. And this situation has really outlined that we really need to have publicly owned vaccine research and production. Imagine a situation where all countries had a state owned vaccine production. We would be able to share the research and we could get the production done as fast as possible. Instead of competing against each other, which is what is happening right now in the private market. It would also mean that we could sell the vaccine at affordable prices. So that not only the rich countries, but also the poorest countries could have access to the vaccine. And I really hope that this situation, as bad as it is, could start a global debate about this issue. So that the next time we are hit with a pandemic, we won't be in this situation. So that's it for Denmark. Take care.