 WRC 19 is the World Radio Communication Conference. It's being held in Shamashake in Egypt. We're here in the last week and I'm here this morning with John Omer, who is the Secretary General for the African Telecommunications Union, the ATU. John, welcome to the studio. Thank you very much. Very good to see you. So, like I say, we're here in the last week. It's been a long conference, four weeks where there have been a lot of discussions here going on. I wanted to ask you, why has this conference been particularly important to you? I know that you attended a lot of ITU conferences before. Why is this one particularly important? I think as an African group, this conference is important to us in a couple of ways. The first is that we are continent with a number of, you know, population in rural communities. And so, we are looking for opportunities to use radio resources to reach to those communities. And so, we did bring in a couple of proposals that deal with how we can, as an African group, use radio communication resources to reach more to our rural communities. I think the second and the other important issue is that we are a growth continent. Most of the other continent, probably apart from South America and the APT region, are more or less saturated. And the opportunity is that IMT 2020 provides for us, INOMAS, as a group. And so, we are looking forward to taking advantage of the resources that will be identified and are allocated for that particular technology to use them as an African continent to further the development of ICT in Africa. So, those are two essential areas that makes this particular conference very important for us an African group. Okay, so looking at those topics in detail, have you been pleased with the resolutions that have been made with regards to these? Yes, in a sense, yes, we are quite comfortable in terms of the proposals that we brought to the conference for purposes of reaching to rural communication, rural communities. The low-altitude technologies that are coming up have been largely agreed on. And so, we think that those technologies provide enormous opportunities for us in Africa in reaching the rural community. In terms of preserving spectrum that are available for satellite industry, that has also been guaranteed by the conference. And we still think that the satellite industry has enormous opportunities for reaching rural communities in Africa, both providing backhaul for terrestrial industry and also direct access to rural communities. For IMT 2020, there's been sufficient progress in that regard and we are happy, as I did mention, there are still late night sessions and we do hope to agree on resources that could be available subject to certain studies being undertaken for IMT 2020. And 5G is the general population we know. And of course, we are here in the last week. There are still decisions to be made and hopefully you will be pleased with those decisions and be able to take home some good news when you go back. But I just really wanted to ask you, in terms of technology and connectivity, what is the landscape looking like at the moment in Africa? As I say, most of our population is rural based and so there's still quite access needs for that constituency in Africa. The second issue is that we are seeing increasingly that the inclusion of financial services with ICT is breaking a lot of barriers in terms of financial inclusion in Africa. And so for as long as we can integrate more via ICT services with financial services, then we could see more of the African region benefiting from financial inclusion and being part and parcel of the development of the finance industry in Africa. And so we do think that integrating ICT services with financial services is a killer in terms of reaching out to many communities in Africa. And so for companies that mobile industry, for example, and other application services that are integrating more and more of their services, ICT services with the financial services are cracking it quite a bit in Africa. So we are looking forward to that opportunity as a growth area in Africa. And in terms of technology, is it going to be 5G or is it going to be satellites or is it going to be both that are really going to enhance connectivity? I think they cannot and should never be, I hope, a situation where one is a substitute for the other. And so the integration of these various technologies, terrestrial, satellite, broadband, fiber is integrated. A lot of backhaul services, as I say, for the terrestrial industry is provided by satellite. And so we cannot say that one will be a substitute of the other. We just need to ensure that we develop these services in a way that provides optimal services to our population, be it fiber, be it terrestrial, be it the satellite industry. Okay, and I say there is light at the end of the tunnel, but in this run up to the end here, what will make the most difference for you in terms of the African continent and in terms of the whole future of connectivity then? I think, as I say, 5G promises to be quite an area that we'll see a lot of our machines talking to each other, various things integrated with each other. So we think, I think, personally, that is a great opportunity for the continent, but more so in the long run. I think in the immediate term, the provision of broadband services to most of our communities, especially rural, is still where we need to focus our energies and ensuring that our terrestrial services are resilient enough. We in Africa are exposed to quite a number of adverse weather patterns. And so building resilient networks at terrestrial is still something that we're looking forward to developing within the African continent. Jonoma, well, thank you for joining us in the studio and we look forward to catching up with you again very soon. Thank you very much. The pleasure is mine as usual. Thank you, Jon. Thank you.