 The message was really that if we do not improve access to connectivity for all we will not be able to extend services, in particular healthcare services that are needed by our communities and that link to that is the prices of internet access for all. If we don't find or drive down the cost of data, the majority of the people will remain excluded in terms of having access to internet services which has become the service provider to go to actually for people to access their basic services. And lastly is the issue of how do we use emerging technologies such as biometrics to make sure that we improve access to technologies but also access to the basic services. For instance, if you use an example of healthcare, if we use artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence for good, how do we improve that access for people in Africa and the majority of the people who are poor who cannot read and write sometimes but with their biometrics their data and their records can be kept with them. So let me start with the challenges. The challenges has been the connectivity. For instance, we've got universal internet penetration but we do not have internet access. The first part is because majority of our population which is poor, they do not have connection to their households and also that internet access and penetration is also determined by prices. South Africa's data prices are very high so those are the challenges that we're faced with but also the issue around digitization of our records. For instance, if you go to our home affairs which is responsible for records. The records are there in paper. So if you want to find out who's great-granddaughter I am I, you'll have to do ten years of digging and that will take forever but instantly we cannot then prove the identity of a person. So that's the work that we're doing but what are the opportunities? So the opportunities is that we are now driving connectivity of South Africa aggressively. As we talk today our communications regulator ICASA have just put service obligations for connectivity for the release of spectrum or licensing of spectrum to the mobile telecommunications operators which will result in the connection of over 18,000 schools, over 5,000 healthcare centers including hospitals and clinics, over 8,000 traditional authority offices. Why is that important is because you're then driving connectivity to the home. As government we are going to connect in the next and this is over the next 36 months. In the next 36 months as government we are going to connect 21,000 government institutions that were not connected which will in 36 months the whole of government will be connected but also connect, provide over 33,000 community Wi-Fi hotspots so that the communities can have access to the internet. But we are also working, I'm shown for those who follow politics of South Africa they've had me saying we are looking at providing free basic data to the households and I mentioned the gigabytes and the telcos were not happy. We want to see if we can provision 10 gigabytes to the households. Why we want to do that is because we want to drive that. But when you do that it's not about just connectivity for itself it means that e-commerce will benefit. It means the SMMEs who are sitting out there can then participate in the economy. It means they can move their goods, they can move their products, they can get a whole lot of people in those products. But it can also mean for our poorer households they can have access to education because currently the Minister of Education and kudos to her during the COVID-19 pandemic she had to manage on a shift basis some sort of attendance of schooling so that she could preserve education. But imagine if we were connected kids would have been able to go to school virtually and not disrupting their lives. But those are the things that are the opportunities that we can develop our countries. We pay a social grant in the country. The president in the state of the nation address just extended the 350 rents that we pay to poorer people to alleviate the impact of COVID-19. But they have to go and queue in a post office to receive that. But if we had the connectivity they would be able to get that money on their phones and then could go and redeem that coupon anywhere they choose to whether they pay for it or withdraw the cash. So those are the opportunities that comes in. And for us the opportunity to catapult South Africa into the digital economy is massive and we are looking at the next 36 months to make sure that South Africa is predominantly running a digital economy. The conversation is important for everyone because the issues around health, access to health, access to services, government services, access to connectivity, the prices of data, they are global in terms of the poor. And resolving the issues of poverty. I've made a statement in my speech. We don't believe that poverty is a permanent state. It's a situation that can be changed with correct and timeless interventions. And those timeless interventions will need global society to invest, multilateral institutions to invest, the global setting standard, standard setting organizations to say what are the applicable standards or frameworks that must be there for all of us to be equal. Because you may not achieve equality but you may achieve equity and that needs all of us to participate together. The eradication of poverty is everybody's problem because a poverty driven or poverty stricken society means an insecure society and that insecurity is not only for South Africa or for Africa. At the end of the day it will bite the western or developed countries later.