 Ladies and gentlemen, I want to tell you a story, a very small story. But before I begin that story, I want to remind you my last name, Ike Wano, among the Igbo people of Nigeria, means somebody that talks too much. But I will not talk too much. I grew up from a family that did a lot of agriculture. As a kid, I hated agriculture. I wanted to be a journalist. Because we never had a television, so I listened to radio. In this picture, this is Mr. Jonathan Isiguzu. We call him Joe the farmer. Joe used to be very poor. Joe was not poor because he was not hard working in the field. Joe was poor because he used to be part of 19 million Nigerian small farmers who never had access to information that would improve existing knowledge. Because if you go to Joe's village, there is no electricity. Joe never had a television. And in fact, all these fancy phones, Joe has never seen it before. The only thing Joe had was this simple battery operated transistor radio. And for over 20 years, Joe received 11 political propaganda that never added value to his livelihood. I created a radio station. I built a small community radio station. Today known as the Small Holder Farmers Rural Radio. And this radio station designs and broadcast agriculture, environment, and market information. Between Joe and 250,000 small farmer listeners, 10 hours a day in Igbo language, enabling them to decide what to produce, how to produce, when to produce, for whom to produce. And the information we gave to Joe was sourced from multiple sources. Research institutions, universities, NGOs. Myself and my staff will refine it to make sure it is timely, relevant, and well adapted. And if you know the Igbo people well, this is the place I like. We sell a little airtime I make small money. And just using a simple 50 watts transmitter and a 100 feet tower, we broadcast. And what Joe did was simple. Tuning to 98.0, listening and learning. We go back on field, we are not done with him. Over the past five years, Joe have improved his crop yield by 45 percent. And that has translated into an increase in household income of 30 percent. Meanwhile, Joe has three wives and two children. But ladies and gentlemen, I just want to tell you that information is powerful. Information opens the mind and motivates the quest for results. An informed person will make a better choice, more than an uninformed person. Education is the key to development. Thank you.