 I'm Amandine Lorto Mbonwazi. I'm working for ZSL Cameroon, around the Jarbiosphere Reserve and also around the Lake Osa. I'm working with the social team, so we are working with populations living around the Jarbiosphere Reserve, especially. It's important for communities to have a voice because sometimes we don't really know what is the great problem. What is the reality of this community that they live in? So it is really important to give them the voice to say, these are our problems, our real problems, because you can't just come and say to a community, stop pushing without knowing why they are pushing, how they push, they are making it, and it is important to give them the voice to help them first, to help their problems and to see how we can go together to take care of illegal wildlife trade. It is important to share these stories because while hearing stories of somebody and not some other communities, you can get a new approach to take care of illegal wildlife trade on your field. As now, we are sharing many things. I have heard today, for example, many stories for other countries that will help me to turn back in my country, Cameroon, and manage my work and see how I can do better to work with populations and take an illegal wildlife trade. So I think it is a very important thing to share these experiences and get something new, something new to work better. I think first of all, local population, they like animals. Sometimes we think that they are just bad people. They like animals first. And from my experience, I know that they like animals, but because of poverty, they are forced to kill them. And generally, local population are not the ones who kill big quantities of animals. They are generally strangers. We came for another city, sometimes another country, and give money to local population to accompany them to the forest and kill big quantities of animals. And my small story is, one day I go to a village and the chief of the village tells us, please, can you help us to protect our animals? Because when I was young, my parents just have to turn around the kitchen and take animals and give us to eat. But now we have to go far in the forest too. So they know that it is important to protect animals best because of poverty. They really have choice. They work with big hunters, big poachers to destroy their forest. So we have to introduce small programs like income generating activities, like developing tourism, to help them getting money to other parts than polishing activities, and also to give them more empowerment to protect their forest through radio programs, through giving them forms to call when they are strangers in the forest. Because they know that it is important to protect, but they need to have more empowerment to protect it and more facilities to do it.