 What we are doing is creating the beginning of a movement that we think is going to make a major difference for millions of people who are seeking human rights throughout the African diaspora and on the African continent. We have an opportunity to bring large numbers of people of African descent that have been working to protect and promote to realize the rights of people of African descent for years. They have been longing for this space since Durban 2001. 20 years ago, one of the greatest achievements that the African descent people made was Durban, self-denominated as African descent. It was a great achievement. And now, after 20 years, we have been able to create a permanent forum for the African descent in a way that marks this whole process of struggle. It is a conquest of the Afro-organized movement and, above all, it generates a new hope for the permanent forum to be an instrument of pressure and promotion of our rights inside the United Nations system but also outside our countries. It gives the opportunity for people of African descent themselves to say what they want and for not for the UN and others or even governments to assume what they want. So we at least want to live with dignity and this pandemic that we call racism, I hope that one day we will come to you, even people who think that it does not exist. Especially for the diaspora, to hear so many different experiences that are similar but also how we can learn with each other. The challenge for us as people of African descent is that we feel while this issue remains on the agenda, there's been little to no progress. We still face systemic institutional discrimination in our everyday lives. We're going to be around for 20 years and 20 years after that and 20 years after that. So maybe 100 years from now, they're going to look back to today as the beginning of something that was a really positive thing for people of African descent around the world.