 If you want to get ICTs into rural areas, into rural populations, you can do a lot worse than using a telecentre, which is what they're doing in Sudan, isn't it? I've got Ahmed Mahmoud Mohammed Issa here, your chair of the GEDRAF Digital City in Sudan. Now, you're using telecentres to reach rural areas. Can you tell us how it works? Yeah, actually, telecentre is a public place equipped with ICT equipment and to help people gather information and to facilitate their lives. And we have different type of telecentres, depending on the service that provided. For example, we have the standard telecentres, which provide training, capacity building and skill development for our community. And in addition to that, there is a knowledge telecentres. These are telecentres where we share experience, best practices with other international telecentre practitioners. And like e-agricuture project, like e-education, e-health and e-government. And how do people use them in Sudan? What are they using them for? Actually, in Sudan, we are mainly concentrating on the knowledge telecentres now because these are applications of what we are thinking is better for our community because we look for, for example, an e-agricuture project implemented in India and we transfer it like the agro-mobile services. That can help even illiterate farmers to be connected to the internet. And so how does it work? Is there a teacher in the capital city and you have children effectively in a remote classroom watching over a computer screen? Yeah, this is actually a public-private partnership with many partners. It is established in a partnership between Gadariff Digital City and the Ministry of Education in Gadariff. And this project is serving the kids in the rural areas, especially the nomads. And this project we have trained with our partners, many instructors or managers to take care of these kids. Okay, we need to wrap up now. But what do you see for the immediate future? Are you optimistic about the immediate future for telecentres in Sudan? Yeah, the future of the telecentre beyond 2015 is to have the portable telecentres because portable telecentres are very effective. They can be attractive, they can be a local house, we call it Gutia or Reakuba. They are very cheap to implement. And with $10,000 you can establish a telecentre that provides service to 1,000 people. And you can use this, does it work by satellite? You can use this even if there isn't an infrastructure? There is a problem in the infrastructure. For example, in that area we have a problem of electricity. There is no power. We are using solar energy. And this solar energy is used also for providing the people with charging their mobiles. This charging of the mobiles, it increases the number of mobiles, it increases the number of internet penetration in Sudan. Okay, we're going to have to leave it there. Thank you very much. Okay.