 Mr. Chair, Secretary General, distinguished delegates, it's a great honor to address you from this podium again, and I will try to not repeat myself. Certainly it's more challenging to be in this role and stick to the three-minute rule than it was yesterday during the ministerial roundtable when I had to moderate. But let me just say thank you again to the ITU, Secretary General, and leadership team and the whole staff for putting this together, as well as from my colleagues from Romania, and last but not least, our Chairman Sabin Sarmash, who's a great friend and wonderful promoter of this cause. Earlier on, he put on the screen a big word, the word dream. It certainly is a dream come true for this city of Bucharest, this country of Romania, to host you all, to host this landmark event. And we would like you to remember Bucharest, not just for its hospitality and hopefully impeccable organization, but also for the progress that is achieved here. And that depends on us all. I will briefly explain the context of Romania's digital transformation and put forth a few thoughts on best practices and hopefully joint efforts. And first of all, let me say it's a manifestation of the highest level of commitment. From our President, Klaus Johannes, to the leader of our government, Nicolae Csuka, they all strongly support the country's digital transformation. It's priority zero, and I think that shows. Second of all, it's the recognition that to digitally transform a nation, you need an integrated strategy. It's not enough to just have the skills, the upskilling, the re-skilling. It's not enough to just have new technologies. It's not enough to just have fast internet speeds. It's not enough to just have digital public services. We have embarked on a massive, ambitious digital transformation for our country, which includes a governmental cloud close to 600 million euro investment, interoperability, and Mr. Sarmash was fundamental in passing a breakthrough law that changes the paradigm to tell state institutions that they don't own the data. The citizens indeed own their data. And also, we are pushing forward with a national coalition for building skills for the future, especially digital skills, especially for senior citizens, for those citizens who may be marginalized, who may not readily benefit from this important progress. We also have a very strong local market and a strong partnership with the private sector. 220,000 employees in our IT and C sectors, 7 to 8 percent of GDP, very productive key for the country's prosperity. 30 percent of all our graduate cohorts come from the STEM areas, exact sciences, and we're committed at the highest level to push even higher with this percentage. 23 percent, almost a quarter are female, making Romania a best practice example in this regard. And there's a functioning and thriving ecosystem including national public research institutes and national universities, the government, and of course the private sector. I salute again the Buchra's declaration of yesterday and thank you all for the strong support and just to reiterate that we stand through this declaration for an open, global, interoperable, reliable, and secure internet for all that leads to equitable use and bridging the digital divide. I wish you all great success in the days and weeks to come and I'm very thankful for this opportunity to make Romania the host country and look forward to many productive debates. Thank you very much.