 We look now to business news. Beyond attracting investment for just monetary gains, Africa needs investment that would yield tangible results. This is a key thrust at the Africa Social Impact Summit aimed at bringing investment on the continent towards a sustainable future. Details in this report. Halfway down the line, Africa is making slow progress on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, STGs, compared to other regions, and is regressing on some development indicators. It isn't this note that leaders from various sectors have converged on these whole, and virtually, to address the continent's challenges and create innovative solutions. With Nigeria presently standing at 146th position in the STG Index ranking, the co-convenece of this year's Africa's Social Impact Summit, speak about the essence for new partnerships and networks. Because it is clear that silo execution can only take us so far. It is the power of leveraging innovation. Innovation can cost the work being done, existing work being done, to scale up quickly, leveraging digitisation. And that is why we also have a deal room here, where organisations that have innovative solutions across the critical sectors, health, education, climate action, food security, can access funding to be able to scale the work they are doing. But with the right policy environment, a conducive environment for producers and consumers, with investors who are here at this Africa Social Impact Summit, who are willing to invest into small-scale medium-scale business and help them scale up so that food gets produced and clothes get manufactured. Speaker after speaker are united on how the private, public and indeed the social impact sectors can collaborate to invest in the sustainability of the S and the development goals. Therefore, the private sector with its scale and sustainability and innovation must take a leading drive in this change. We must harness the strength of our multistakeholder partners and leverage enterprise to do innovation. The Africa Social Impact Summit is designed to eliminate the friction, the competition, the lack of collaboration. It is designed to ensure that the most efficient way to apply resources to solving social problems is through the guide we have here. As various aspects of the 17 SDGs take centre stage, questions are answered on gender equality, qualitative education and Africa's race against time. The number of indicators within SDC4 would have been able to make some appreciable advancement in early childcare development. To be honest, we are still a very dependent nation on donations and, you know, importation from, you know, from other countries. And you will find out that the SDGs are structured around leaving no one behind. That's the thing. And the very fabric of the SDGs is homegrown solutions. We need an enabling environment which includes having policies and laws in place and all that. Of course, you know that the issues that have been disturbing us has always been the leadership and the governance structure that is making it look as if women are not relevant. This year's summit, themed Global Vision, Local Action, Features, Engaging, Discussions, Focused and Different Sectors all aimed at driving positive change across Africa. Just in academia, plus the news legas.