 As aripo, since 2008, we are organising jointly with the Awaipo Academy and the Africa University which is based in Mutare in Zimbabwe. This master programme on intellectual property. This programme once again had a great impact in the whole continent. In nine editions we have trained more than 247 people who are now graduated as master degree programme on intellectual property. Now these 247 people we just conducted a trace study and we discovered that almost all of them are active in the area of intellectual property. Some are now in the intellectual property office working there as examiners offices and some of them they became the heads of the AP office due to this programme. Some are patent agents, trade marker, some other in the courts. Some courts we had the case of the commercial court in Ghana for example that directly requested us to train the judges and after training those judges with the course they created the section on intellectual property in the commercial court in Ghana. This is happening in many other countries. These people that we trained by the Awaipo Academy in collaboration with Aripo and the Africa University are changing the landscape of IP in the continent. They are not coming from the Aripo Member States only but they come from more than 25 countries in the African continent. So this is a programme that is open to anyone in the continent to attend. We have even people, candidates from other countries outside Africa who are interested in the programme but because of the limitations that we have in terms of funding we cannot take them and we have limited ourselves in training people from Africa. Every year we receive more than 100 applications for this programme but we only have the capacity to receive 30 to 40 students. That means that more than 60 people every year fail to have the opportunity to be trained and that shows that we need to come out with other solutions in terms of offering this programme to more people because they are interested and they want to work in this area. The MIP programme in Mutare in Zimbabwe indeed is a success story once again because from this programme really we have been able to capacity create those skills that the continent is in need. It's one of the platforms that really allows African people today to dialogue and discuss about the intellectual property issues. We have just established a journal, it's called African Journal on Intellectual Property. We are now in a second issue, the first one was launched last year and this is again the platform that we are providing to our master programme student and any other academic people who want to write articles that are focusing on intellectual property in Africa. We believe that will be again another platform, intellectual platform, academic platform that will allow us to mainstream discuss issues related to the continent. We would like to see these initiatives growing and having more and more of these opportunities. We have been in touch with some university who would be interested in establishing a master's degree programme on intellectual property. We know that there are limitations, the YAP Academy cannot be everywhere in the world but I think we need to be creative in coming out with other initiatives. We cannot every year leave out more than 60 people who would like to learn about intellectual property and we are interested in having people who are educated about intellectual property and they are out there and they cannot access this opportunity. So once again this is something that is open to debate and how do we reach out to those people who would like to learn more about intellectual property. We believe that more will come, more can happen in terms of the development of IP but I think the basic ingredient for the development of IP in the African continent is education about IP. It's creating awareness, it's involving more and more university and research institutions in intellectual property.