 Welcome to the World Summit on the Information Society 2016 in Geneva, Switzerland. And I am delighted to be joined by Gitanjali Saa, who is the WSIS coordinator at the ITU. So Gitanjali, a lot of work, I imagine, to build the agenda for the WSIS Forum. Thank you, Claire. It's a pleasure to be here. Yes, the beauty of the WSIS Forum is that the agenda and the program are built in a true multi-stakeholder format. So civil society, private sector, academia, technical community, governments, UN agencies, we all work together as one to build the program and we also get suggestions on the format of the WSIS Forum every year. So this year we received more than 150 suggestions on the thematic aspects and the format of the WSIS Forum, which we included. And then the result was this content-rich agenda that you saw this week. And indeed, it ranged from bridging the digital divide to cybersecurity to helping agricultural workers use e-services. It was so broad. Yes, it is. In fact, because the WSIS covers the 18 WSIS Action Lines and they cover the whole range of different ICT applications, services, ICT infrastructure, cybersecurity, and the whole range of ICT applications within its framework. So this year, the highlight was to link the WSIS Action Lines and the WSIS framework to the Sustainable Development Goals. This linkage is extremely important and crucial for the entire WSIS community. And the WSIS Forum was the starting point. It's a real opportunity, isn't it, for the ICT for Development community to show that information communication technologies can really be enablers for development and help the world achieve these sustainable development goals. Yes, this was the overarching theme of the WSIS Forum 2016. This being, in fact, unique and special because it was the first after the United Nations General Assembly overall review and the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals. So this was the key theme and you will also notice in the outcomes, which will be already online on the website today, how each session actually shows a clear linkage between the WSIS Action Lines and the Sustainable Development Goals. And what is really quite unique about WSIS is that there's high policy frameworks but also there's lots of grassroots initiatives which are showcasing best practice and some of the success stories about what works. Yes, we in fact award the WSIS prize every year and WSIS prizes are awarded to multi-stakeholders who have performed well or who are voted as the best project in the different categories. And this year we also introduced the concept of champions. So the five most voted were invited as champions and their work was celebrated during the WSIS Forum. We also introduced the new format of high level track facilitators who moderated the policy sessions. So these were nominated by the different stakeholder types. It worked extremely well and they basically brought in their views, their experiences and the wide range of experiences that they have in the past about the ICT ecosystem. As you say, you're continually innovating with the format this year much more interactive. You have been a WSIS coordinator since 2009. So what really stood out for you for the WSIS 2016? There were a lot of formats for engagement and reaching out and to the WSIS stakeholders. So one of them as I said was moderated policy sessions. We introduced a new format of hackathons. We introduced the WSIS champions. So this year the WSIS Forum was all about partnerships, collaboration. There was an excitement to network, to build and to brainstorm on the next steps for ensuring that the WSIS action lines play the crucial role they can for achieving the SDGs. Gitanjali Saa, WSIS coordinator at the ITU, thank you very much for joining us. Thank you. And please do tune into the ITU YouTube channel where there are many interviews with the participants from the WSIS Forum 2016.