 Greetings from Geneva. I'm John Cerezo, currently working as partnership officer at the United Nations Road Safety Fund. Let me first congratulate the Universal Postal Union for the successful organization of the 52nd International Leatherwriting Competition for Young People. I would like to thank the organization for choosing road safety as the topic of this year, a real crucial issue all over the world, particularly affecting children, teenagers and young adults. As team member of the UN Road Safety Fund, we work hard every day to raise awareness about this global, but often hidden, unknown crisis. A crisis that affects every single country, claims too many lives and products too many injures. Affecting disproportionately low and middle income countries, it is a huge real burden for millions of people every year. In this context, it has been sometimes a real nice surprise, but also actually quite comforting, to see how aware our youngest children are about the risks they have to confront on the road every day. They are frequently among the most vulnerable road users, as per the instance in many cities, depend on adults to drive safely, but also depend on us to build and manage roads properly, and produce adequate vehicles and transport systems. They need good road infrastructures, better roads, better signing and responsible behavior. They are clearly asked to be taken into consideration, and never forget that we are more responsible. From the letters, signed sometimes by very, very young children, we need to admit that they are extremely conscious about those threats they face every day on the road, but also conscious about the solutions. As we do, even in our world of millions and millions of preventable accidents, solutions are already there. Beautifully done, through the description of their superpowers, I have been amazed at the level of knowledge of some very technical aspects of road safety work. With the imagination, I have also traveled through the roads of the world, visiting communities from the American Amazonia to eastern Africa, Middle East, or islands in the Pacific. I have met the members of the family, I have new, new myths and unknown superpowers to me. It's been a very beautiful experience. And thank you all of you, children, for your effort, first of all, your interests and your letters. It has been a pleasure and an honor to read all of you. Not only do we adults know the solutions to tackle the road safety crisis, but as proven all over the dozens of letters received, children do too. I would like to finish thanking the UPU and the Road Safety Fund for allowing me to participate in this competition. It has certainly reassured me about how important it is to continue developing road safety programs, particularly addressed to children, to achieve our common goal. A world where roads are safe for everyone, everywhere. Thank you.