 Hello, my name is David Wright. I'm director of the UK Safe Internet Centre at the UK Charity SWGFL and it's been my pleasure and my privilege to have chaired the working group that has reviewed and updated the ITU Child Online Protection Guidelines for Policymakers. Over recent weeks children across the world have turned to the internet to maintain some form of normality in terms of their learning, their education and their socialising. At this very challenging time, equally and perhaps predictably, this has also raised the threats and harms that children encounter and brought into sharp focus the need for countries across the world to assess their child online protection strategy and activities. Never, never has this been as important as it is right now. And the new ITU Child Online Protection Guidelines are there to help guide and inform policy makers across the world in this important task. Now, I know firsthand just how vital these guidelines are in structuring a national assessment of child online protection strategies and provision, having worked on behalf of the ITU with the Republic of Georgia and more recently with the Ukraine in determining their national child online protection landscape reports. Building on the new ITU policymaking guidelines, these have been updated and include a clearer definition of what child online protection is and that is it concerns itself with the full spectrum of harms that children face online, whether these are illegal or indeed legal. Further sections include help for policy makers in determining why child online protection is important, a preparation for a national child online protection strategy, together with recommendations and clear and simple examples accompanied by a really useful checklist. The working group has invested much time in developing this and on their behalf, the new guidelines are shared for policy makers across the world to better protect their children online. Thank you very much.