 It's inspiring to see all you ambitious minds pushing for what really can be. Kazaraskom is an impact-driven town developer. Our group delivered 40,000 homes in government programs, in urban expansions, integrated towns. We're part of the Sawiris family, Oraskom conglomerate. We believe that all families should have the opportunity to own a home with dignity and a real asset to pass on to their children. We also believe that cities are not just engines of growth, they should be systems for well-being and ultimately happiness. Three very different examples. This is Hadam City, 400 hectares 20 kilometers west of Cairo. 12,000 affordable homes built, 40,000 residents, center left, an urban center, right, a very vibrant downtown for schools, retail, clinic, religious and sports facilities. Unit sizes between 38 to 60 square meters, selling prices between 25 to 40,000 euros per home, 50 megawatt station, more green areas than even luxury developments, and we create jobs in textile and recycling companies. The Sawiris family foundations also accompany our projects and in here 400 street children are safely housed and educated. The other town, Alguna, for perspective, this is four by nine kilometers. For perspective, that's everything in Manhattan below 110th Street. So all of Central Park, Upper West, Upper East, Midtown, all the way south. Half is developed and conceived by my chairman, Samisa Weiris. You see how we brought the sea into the desert. 25,000 permanent residents, 3 marinas, 4,000 villas and apartments, 2,000 affordable homes for low-income families, 400 retail outlets, 100 plus restaurants, campus of the Technical University of Berlin, four primary and high schools, a hotel school and even a branch of the Library of Alexandria. We got 20 hotels here, 3,000 rooms, hospital, airport, solar power plant, and Alguna won the United Nations Global Green Award. Now radically different, a passion project, our philanthropic arm, the Baraka slum in Dakar, Senegal, 1,600 people in absolute hardship, but urban slums often sit on incredibly valuable land and so we can eradicate slums at final net cost zero. How? On two-thirds of the land, we built free apartments for the slum residents. Along with a school, a kindergarten vocational training and shops for them to work in and no longer a slum, the remaining freed up one-third of land skyrockets in value and there we built and sell apartments and the profit recovers the 6.5 million that my chairman invested as a bridge. Final net cost zero and so now you do that again with the same money and ideally you raise funds to replicate the model. 1,600 people live in their new homes now. What? Thank you. Thank you. What next? And this is where all of you come in, right? The Dakar Peninsula, four million people pushing towards our land in red, 200 hectares, three kilometers coastline, one kilometer lake, pine forests, dunes, this is real, this is now, this is ready and a white canvas for your companies and for your support and for your ideas. So let's join forces to break with everything, all the old everything, right? So you want to build a better society and correct the wrong, then let's find the best people out there. Let's find the most brilliant ones in water, in power, in sewage, in waste, in education and in mobility and so yeah let's go and build a town. We start now the second I get off the stage here, I'm taking names who's in. Thank you.