 Well, it's with great pleasure that I welcome Roshid Ismailov, who is the Deputy Minister of Telecom and Mass Communications for the Russian Federation. Mr Ismailov, good afternoon. Good afternoon. I'm glad you could be here with us. Now, Russia has some particular challenges. It's a big country, the biggest. It's sparsely populated. But I understand you've got some ambitious targets, shall we say, in terms of broadband. Tell us about those targets and the challenges in meeting them. Well, this is quite a challenging target because we have to bring broadband to each and every settlement in Russia, towns and villages that are equal or bigger than 250 people, inhabitants. And, you know, according to the plan, we have to build 200,000 kilometers of fiber optics. And that's quite challenging assuming the territory and assuming the weather conditions and the climate and the distance. That's the first challenge. So that's your target. When do you have to do that to buy it? That is, by 2018, we have an ambition to... 90% of our population to get connected to that one. Okay. That's where you want to go. Where are you now? Well, it's hard to say. I mean, I haven't got the reason, you know, data as regards. But we are developing, I must say. I think that 50% is over of the target. And so the challenge then is essentially a logistical one, is getting this infrastructure out. It is logistics. Obviously, it is, I mean, the distance. That's the biggest challenge actually itself. Then there are some challenges as regards to the business because, I mean, obviously business wants to go there where the business case exists. I mean, there's no business case usually with these small towns and villages. But we have a so-called fund of universal communication services where we are accumulating the funds and we are subsidising this project with this. Okay, so what do you think will be the dividend? What will be the benefit for Russian society from this project? Always get connected and have the right to get access to the broadband, to the internet. Well, one of the benefits is that in the towns and villages that we see where we put the broadband and where, you know, IT and internet exists, for example, the consumption of alcohol is getting down. Is that right? Just quite bold, straightforward. So you can draw directly. The young generation, they have something that they can, you know, make themselves busy with. Okay. So there's a community dividend as well as... They have an access to the social networks. They can, you know, be informed about the recent and the most modern, you know, innovations or news and, you know, trends and so far and so forth. So they don't feel themselves, you know, excluded from the mainstream of the society developing. And those smaller villages where the rollout has already occurred, are they enthusiastic adopters of the internet once it comes to town? Yeah, the younger generation especially. I mean, we have already quite, you know, a big percentage of broadband accessible people. And, you know, it's not like... It's not stiff or rigid. I mean, the society is developing and the new generations are coming in. It's quite a pattern. I mean, when somebody is talking about the internet, they are giving the examples of their children, of the younger generations, how they're kin with the gadgets, with the mobile, how they can easily, you know, get connected, you know, write macros or whatever. But that is it. That's the general trend. Now, having in mind that we still have quite good school education, this is on top of that. This is improving their overall educational, you know, capabilities. Well, Deputy Minister Ismailov, I thank you very much for your time today.