 In the aviation sector, I am very excited to have been invited to preside over this inaugural commercial scheduled flight to Gakamega. What is happening today, it is the fruits of the new governance model in Kenya. The Ruto administration has embraced as a style of governance continuous engagement. Last week, the president hosted the leadership of Western Kenya in Gakamega and the leadership of Western Kenya requested him to facilitate air transport to Western Kenya to ease the costs of doing business to make it easy to save time. And after long deliberations with the leadership of Western Kenya, the president did instruct his his to liars with other stakeholders. The president went out of his way to reach out to Skyward Express to partner with the people of Western Kenya for their service. I want to say that this new policy of continuous engagement is what is going to make things move in this country. The leadership of Western Kenya has been crying for many years. The people of Western Kenya have been crying for many years, but there was nobody to give them an ear. Exactly a week, less than a week after the president listened to them, this is today happening. We want to say that the Kenya Kwanzaa administration is keen to make it possible to have air transport across the country, to make it easy for people to do business, to open up tourism opportunities, and to enable Kenyans move faster and save time so that they can use that time for other productive issues in the economy. So I want to say, Skyward, Hongera, this is the way to go. We ask you to partner with the government and open up more routes. And the president has instructed the CS, Mukomen, that at the end of our term, we shall have open commercial flights to every county or the neighboring counties across Kenya to make it easier for Kenyans to do business, to make it easier for domestic tourism to thrive. So we are indeed very, very grateful. As the CSR said, this maiden flight to Kakamega is very nostalgic to me. Three years ago, I was at the street officer in our whole division in Kakamega, near Mumias, and my family was living in Nairobi, and it took me six hours to drive to Kakamega, and I would arrive there very tired and I would whistle off the time on the road, and I can just imagine how nice it is now to have any business in Kakamega, in Bungoma, in Mumias, and the surrounding areas. So this is very good, and Captain Mukomen, we want to urge you to partner with the government and open up more routes across the country so that Kenyans can travel with the East. What is happening today, and what will fall shortly, is a clear indication that air transport is no longer a luxury for the chosen few. Air transport in this country is now a necessity to ease the cost of doing business, to ease travel, to make it convenient for people. And I have just looked at the rates to Kakamega, and I was just doing quick mathematics. It is actually cheaper, monetary wise, to fly to Kakamega and back than to drive without now costing the time that you save, more than 12 hours to unfro. So this is very good, and I want to urge the people of Western Kenya to make use of this facility, to make sure that this airline grows so that we don't just have one daily flight, we have many flights because there are many opportunities in Western Kenya.