 Vous avez la parole. Mme Nadous, Békely Thomas, la coordinatrice du système de Nations Unies en République Sud-Africaine. Merci beaucoup, Grand-Frayer. Je pense que 3 minutes, je vais dire oui, je conclure avec tout ce que vous avez dit. Merci beaucoup. Mais de toute façon, parce que j'ai été donné cette opportunité, je veux juste dire que je suis juste heureuse d'être en train de parler, en fait, comme la dernière parole, parce que le fait que je vois l'entusiasme et l'optimisme de certains de nos leaders, en commençant avec notre sœur Aminatai et aussi avec le Président. C'est très important de comprendre le fact that, yes, with the demographic dividend, yes, with the GDP, that is not negligible when we talk about all our countries, the 54 countries. And yes, with a population of 1.2 billion, consumers, producers, innovators, it's really possible to be the powerhouse in the 21st century. Like Asia has been at the end of the 20th century, they started the way we did. But while we have all this potential around us, we need also to reflect on how to co-create our systems to be adaptable, to be relevant to the society of the future. I hate to say the future society, but it is to the society of the future because we have to reimagine. What it would be like. Therefore, first of all, the first thing that we have to reimagine is like the concept note that you have produced, the chairperson, is really our political system. It's not doing a service. We really need to reflect deeper, go deeper and analyze. What is it that we can do to tweak and to calibrate to make sure that it miss the need of the future? And the second thing I should say is that we are abandoning more and more because of the media and everything, our value system. So how do we go back to our own African value system and have a moral regeneration? And that is for the cohesion, that is for peace building, that is us working together to implement the Agenda 2063. The third thing is how do we reimagine also a governance system, a structure that enables us to work together in a coordinated collaborative manner. And I will say this because of my experiences everywhere. We have adopted the system of a silo approach when it comes to implementation. But what is missing in Africa is not policy, not at all. We have many policies and I agree with the speaker before. We have strategies, well thought out strategies and Africa has now the capacity to produce its own policy homegrown strategies. But implementation will be critical important. We cannot implement and we have learned it from the COVID-19 experience. We cannot implement something that is really a problem of one sector without bringing all the various sectors in a holistic manner. And therefore an integrated approach is critical and very important. A whole society approach is very critical and very important. We have to bring our youth at the center and at the front. We have to bring our learning institutions, research institutions, technologies centers, at the front and the center in planning and implementation of our programs. And I think it's very critical and very important that we look at that. And finally is the partnership and resource mobilisation. I'll be very brief. Partnership, it has to be equitable. A partnership, a partner comes because partner has an interest. But we have to have our strategy in engaging with a partner. And discuss at une equal part. Resource mobilisation and funding is very critical and very important. Our domestic resources could be used efficiently, effectively. The illicit financing should be stopped. Deaths should be managed properly. And if we do all this and make sure that we are really going with a paradigm shift of saying we will manage, we will self rewrite and teach our children to be more independent and not to be dependent and despondent like my sister Aminata said. We will arrive there and we will certainly be at the powerhouse in the 21st century. Thank you very much.