 My name is Cristina Barak. I work for Food and Agriculture Organization, based in the country of this Kenya. I work around land and natural resources governance within the FAO. This is a bad conference and one thing about it is the film this year has been one of the best themes, because it's high time we speak about corruption within the land sector. Looking at statistics, the bigger part of corruption in any country is governance and the land and natural resources also as the main theme or the main area where corruption is taking place. For example, if you look into the formal justice system, 80-90% of the cases in the system are all land and natural resources and are all geared up to corruption. The institutions which replace my countries, if you look at their performance and you start putting a spoke on to them, they are performing less why this corruption has put an end to it. So I think it's high time now, this becomes one of the themes and we discuss it openly in a way that it can be the cause of problems we are facing in our countries. We are not able to plan for our resources, we are not able to dedicate for our resources, we are not able to make decisions for our resources, neither even making sure that the mutation of policy we put in place is done just because of corruption and it's all in the entire chain, bottom up, bottom up. So it doesn't have to be just the middle as a woman being a crime to get a title that doesn't matter so it's high time that we discuss it. And I feel that the film should not be only left for this year, probably it's important because that is one of the main challenges we are facing in Africa and the African community. And one of the other ways we can really solve this, apart from discussing it here, is to put up declaration, to put up binding instruments for us to be able to work in. And to take a medium of short durations but it's something we need to bind our leaders, we need to bind our people to be able to really cover up these aspects of action because the most affected are the communities and the most affected are the marginalists who cannot have a voice to speak, so it's important. One thing about this conference which has brought forward is to only discuss corruption as one of the main problems, the only problem we have to face in Africa within the land sector, but also putting up measures for looking at solutions on the best way to work. We have very good practices, we have very good cases we can learn from, very beautiful lessons learned from, you know, how we have been able to work and be able to implement some of these things. One important fact is that we need to know what we are managing, what we are governing and from there now we need to look into data. So the moment we get the data we are able to see what is there and how much we can be able to plan for, how much we can be able to look at for and be able actually to govern it. So this is very, very important. And I will also wish that as much as we are discussing at this level probably one of the biggest goals will not only be, I can see a very big representation of the traditional leadership or the customer leadership in this conference. One important factor is we need the executive, we need the presidents, the ministers, people who really who are looking to the aspects of policies and the implementation both during the legislation and at the executive of each of the countries. So they are able to adopt, they are able to customize that their own whatever lessons learned come from, all recommendations come from here. Because as much as we have all these representations still we don't have the main decisions makers of each of the countries involved in this conference. So that is my call and I wish this talk is done openly at all levels. Let it be an affirmative action actually to reduce corruption within the line sector. And we have a lot of openness and transparency and most of it accountability within the processes. Thank you very much.