 Thank you Patricia for outlining some very clear key priorities. So our third speaker is Olga Balieva. Olga is a membership and community strengthening manager at the Eurasian Harm Reduction Network. She's also a member of the Eurasian Network of People Who Use Drugs and an active member of the International Network of Women Who Use Drugs. So she will be speaking on key priority issues and needs from the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region. Thank you Olga. Good morning dear friends and colleagues. I am thankful for the opportunity to talk to you about the situation with drug policy and harm reduction programs in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia. In my presentation I would like to tell you how joint efforts we are changing the situation towards the humane drug policy and what are the main problems to be solved in the nearest future to save people's lives. This year's Eurasian Harm Reduction Network celebrates its 20th anniversary and I remember a time from 1997 to 2003 that was a time when harm reduction was an improved product for our region. International, some of these participants came to our region and were telling about the harm reduction philosophy and approaches. This was a time of underground syringe exchange clubs. NSP program were focused on the safety of the veins and culture of the drug use. We were talking about the cooking methods and with very eyes full of surprise and admiration we are talking each other's story about the harm reduction program in New York and Amsterdam. In 2003 the programs on HIV contraction appeared. Harm reduction teams met the innovative approaches with hope and started learning. By 2010 the storage facilities were filled up with syringes and condoms. The partnership relation with AIDS center were built. OST program started working. People got access to OST treatment. At that moment 26 of 29 countries covered by Eurasian Harm Reduction Network activities in the region are supporting harm reduction intervention within HIV response. But why is the HIV epidemic is in Europe and Central Asia region still continuing to raise? Besides the economic, social and cultural subregional factors I would like to talk about two reasons because these are the reasons we must and can influence. First, HIV prevention program didn't change the attitude towards the people who is drugs into a more tolerant one. Second, repression and decriminalization of drug use and of possession for personal use are escalating. The one-stop-shop approach became a breakthrough for the relationship between the HIV, TB and Narcological Center. A person comes for OST and may receive also ARV and TB treatment at the same time. But all other needs of people who is drugs which are beyond the scope of these services, they often remain uncovered. Please show the video. This has cases happened in our region because of drug control department requesting military security to transport OST medicine from OST services to hospital. Also people who have been sticking the OST plan for years, I mean three, five, seven years, still don't get to take OST home. That's the dark side of the one-stop-shop solution. Criminalization is when the sentence for the remains of the heroine on the foil could mean from three to the 12 years of imprisonment. Of course, OST in prisons is a unique breakthrough in cooperation between prison departments and healthcare system. But there are some specific first three days after detention determine the fate of the person. At that time, the person has to be interrogated in the condition of abstinence to avoid pain, humiliation and physical assault. People confess crimes they didn't commit and receive three, five, eight-year sentence. After being held in temporary detention facility, they go to prison which may happen more than a year after last receive the OST. These are two ways of treating people who use drugs. And in our countries, government choose the path of repression. Economic crisis, significant decrease of donors finding military conflict. If this solution, the service focused on the needs of people who use drugs are the first to be cut. Eurasian harm reduction network in our partners, we do all. We tend to keep the harm reduction services working in our region. Assessing countries readiness to transfer from donor support to national funding. Advocating for the inclusion of the expenses on NSP and OST services into the local budget. Working to ensure the community would dock the quality of services. However, without ensuring the right for private life and safety, we can go far in our budget advocacy work or in our work on improvement of the quality of services. Support be provided to people who use drugs, inspire them to protect their rights through the international courts' ombudsman UN structure. Believe me, no drug has caused so much harm. At the torture of people who use drugs by police, denial of access to treatment, corruption and government double standard. The right for private life already include the right for personal use of drugs. And we now try to reduce harm from the repressive drug policy and inadequate action of government officials. Our strength is in unity and mutual support. Each moment of working here with you give us force and courage to move forward. Towards the world where people respect each other, choice and understand the key value. Heads could be different, but human rights are universal. Thank you.