 From the International Telecommunication Union headquarters in Geneva, we are celebrating the World Telecommunication and Information Society Day. To help us in the celebration today, we have Mr. Frederic Assumano, head of the Market Regulation Unit from the Ghana Telecom Regulatory Authority. Welcome, Frederic. Thank you very much. Thank you for joining us. So, Frederic, you have been active in ITU for the past seven years, as I understand. Could you please tell us some of your experience in international standards development and how the bridging the standardization gap might have helped in achieving your goals in the ITU? Thank you very much. I think, first and foremost, I'm privileged to have these long years of participating at the ITU, study group three, due to the support I have from my administration back home in Ghana. It has been very excellent and very, I must say, a very good platform for learning because at ITU, I had difficulties probably in appreciating diplomacy in making cases. But over the years, I find myself in learning from various countries and it's a shape point taken and you could attest to the fact that my participation has contributed immensely over the last years to ITU study group three issues. What are some of the topics of interest to you personally and in terms of that you're driving in the work of ITU? Thank you very much. I mean, we've championed a lot of questions, especially in the area of MFX, Boba Financial Services, spectrum sharing, tariffs issues and just recently, we had three of our work items being sent to technical approval process for recommendation process and we have been very instrumental in driving that. So would you summarize perhaps the success factors in terms of the participation in ITU having the support from your administration is one element and you mentioned you've been here since 2012, so there is a continuity in your participation at least over the last seven years and then picking topics that are relevant to you and to the region and to your country? I think back home and not only that in African regions participation, we've tried to rely most on ITU standards in forming our policies and regulation issues. I mean, in times that we find ourselves in debating on standards, we have always resolved to ITU standards because it gives a platform for a lot of ideas and a lot of experiences from various use cases from various countries and regions, so you have the opportunity to get the best practice to shape your policy back home and both the country administration and the regional body have always resolved to standards of ITU. Thank you very much and happy World Telecom and Information Society Day 2019. Thank you very much, thank you.