 Olof Ehrenkroner, welcome. You are senior advisor at the Swedish foreign ministry and you have the title of ambassador. You are here representing your country in Geneva at the Wiesis plus 10 high-level events. What are the core issues for your country? The core issues are basically two. Establishment of the human rights online as they are established offline. That has been one of our core issues the last few years actually and we have been rather successful having a resolution passed through the Human Rights Council here in Geneva. The second area is of course ICT and development. We are strong in development policies in general and we believe that ICT should be one of the main pillars for the Swedish development policies the coming years. And what do you think you are in this process now? Is there a lot of work to do to get to where you want to be with regards to the implementation of ICTs? Absolutely we are now three billion people on the internet globally. There are still four billion that should be connected or at least I mean we would like to see everyone in the world connected to this fantastic instrument that the internet is. So the digital divide between the developing countries and the developed countries are one of the most great challenges in our time to bridge it and to close it. Within the WSIS process there are 11 action lines are there any action lines in particular of particular importance to Sweden? Yeah we believe that it's not only about broadband and technical facilities it's also about institutional capacity. It's lack of institutional capacity that in countries where there are sufficient technological means to be connected the still it's not the access is still not affordable for for the great many people and and this is something that is connected to the institutional capacity. So we believe that the institutional capacity building is one of the should be one of the main focuses for development policies. Good governance in the analog word is very important. In the digital word good governance might be even more important actually. Indeed and as you said you're trying to bridge that gap make sure there's a smaller difference between the real world if you were in the virtual world. So within that within that that framework of the rule of law and making sure that the rule of law is as strong online as it is offline what is the most important is it's security is it's what elements in particular? When we see security and freedom as two sides of the same coin in in open societies security in open in an open society should be there to protect freedom and freedom is a very important part of security. That is one of the core lessons from the digital word that freedom is a way to build security and resilience in the internet. If you lack freedom the system becomes less resilient and the security becomes less present for the end users. So we believe that there should not we don't seek a trade-off between freedom and security. We seek a constitutional concept where you can provide both security and freedom and privacy. Now next year will be the 10th year of the UISIS follow-up meetings and conferences an important year for the process. What do you hope for the future of the process beyond 2015? We hope that ITU will focus on the developing policies and the developing countries. We think that is the single most important challenge for us we and for the developing countries access and affordable access to information and freedom of expression is the way forward in the modern society where you build the future by knowledge and the only way to get knowledge is to have access to the places where knowledge is present and this means that you can't close yourself up you can't build walls around the country you need to have be open and you need to get your people having the possibilities to access all the information that is out there almost 100% of all information in the world is today digitalized and we will be very very close to 100% in a few years time. Ambassador thank you very much.