 I would like to summarize briefly at the end of our session. Can you name please three major challenges for your country today on the national, regional and global level? Who will to start? No, I can't. Well, on the national level, it's as always ensuring a sustainable economic growth in the very challenging environment. Thankfully, we have a positive growth of 4% something like this year. But we are not complacent and we need to make sure that this economic growth is spread and the benefits benefit as wide the scope of the population as possible. On the regional level, I already mentioned several things. Perhaps I should highlight that the biggest challenge that we face on the regional, the biggest opportunity perhaps, challenge slash opportunity lies in the word connectivity. And this is the buzzword right now. We want it to be developed. We see this Belt and Road Global Gateway PGI by G7 all as complimentary and as benefiting not just our region but all these outside players on the global level. I think the biggest challenge is how to make sure that the United Nations system again works. Our president addressed this issue in numerous statements including at the United Nations General Assembly stating that the role of the General Assembly needs to be strengthened as the most representative body and the Security Council needs to be reformed. And the voice of the middle powers of which Kazakhstan is one should be strengthened. Thank you very much, Mr. Kastanian. I guess the challenges are pretty the same. For national level, this is to continue the ambitious democratic reform agenda that we started in 2018 after the Velvet Revolution and these reforms will and are supporting the economic growth of my country. On the regional level of course this is the normalization of relations with our neighbors and opening of regional communications. And on international level this is to make the international tools and mechanisms adequately working without any reluctance. Because sometimes the geopolitical prevails and in that case some of the regions are under the shadow. And the presence in this panel in the audience is a clear identification of another identification or example of this. Because during the panel of very honorable Minister Kuleba the audience was full. During the panel, this panel when we are talking about the challenges in Central Asia and South Caucasus and I do believe that these regions are not less important. What is going on here? The whole is half empty although it's half full as well and there were no questions. Thank you very much. We are perfect with our timing and I would like really to thank Raman Vasilienka, Deputy Minister for the Affairs of Kazakhstan and Vahan Kastanyan, Deputy Minister for the Affairs of Armenia. Thank you so much for this substantial conversation.