 I'm here to talk to you about the importance of dialogue in development. That is where I live. That is where I've lived the whole of my life. That is Kibera, that I'm very proud of. In 1998 the issue of the flying toilets started in Kibera. And suddenly there was a lot of funding to build toilets in Kibera. And with the funding came few ideas and the biogas idea came in. In the year 2000 the biogas was in place and that is what it is. Unfortunately the biogas is inside the toilet. What you are seeing there is tissue papers seated on the sidelines. Honestly, who will cook in a toilet? This is a brilliant idea and you can see from the light that is coming from it. There is a lot of gas. There is a lot of gas. But unfortunately maybe the person who did that did not get the chance to dialogue with experts and all stakeholders and find a way to make this very useful. This is such a smart idea. It's clean gas. But it is in the wrong place, honestly. Another brilliant idea came and they made a toilet with tiles and all that. These are flush toilets. There are the pipes. The pipes have been put so well. The sewer lines are in place. But hold on, wait a minute. This is the water situation in Kibera. This is a daily situation where people have to line up for hours and hours to get clean water. And they use these 20 litre jarikens to take the water home. I doubt if they are willing to use this precious commodity to flush it down the train. These are the holes gaping now. And because the pipes are not being used, they break it. These I repeat again is a smart idea, but in the wrong place. I started a school, Kibera Girls Soka Academy. Actually it was a football program just to break the gender inequalities that was in Kibera in the year 2000. Over the years playing football with girls and really training them to be able to play and they were primary school going kids. It was really tough. And then I started losing them because they couldn't make it to high school. So I decided to start up a high school for them, a free high school for them. But this is where the dialogue started. I couldn't just build a school without consulting these girls and asking them, are you willing to come to school? And they confirmed that they were willing to come to school. And from 18 girls, we have 138 girls starting for free in that school right now. We do it differently in KGSA. We want our voices to be heard. We hear, we put our ears on the ground to understand the dynamics of what we are doing. This is me talking to the people of the community and trying to address the challenges. These are some of the people, our supporters. We encourage them to come over and we dialogue with them to find out the best way forward. It doesn't end there. The girls have a say they're supposed to be the voiceless, but we give them their voice. And they sit down with our partners and they iron out the challenges that they face. And that way we are able to serve, we are able to focus, we are able to prioritize. And that is why we are consistent and we are there. And the school has been there for over these years. This guy you're seeing here is Sean Rush. He is the president of Junior Achievers, the JA. For those of you who know JA, it operates in 180 countries, but he has the time to come to the school. He is one of our personal supporter, comes to the school, dialogues with the girls, and they come up with plans that are supposed to be done for the school and it gets done. It gets done. This is the soka team. The football team still continues. The coach has to bend down and really sit down and talk to these girls and hear what they have to say. And that is the importance of dialogue. Have you ever asked yourself one thing? There is a lot of goodwill, people donating, donating all the time, but the poverty levels never go down. I think there is a missing link and this missing link is dialogue. Dialogue. We are so much about statistics and data. We need to know these about people. We need to start putting faces on the data and then putting names on the faces. And that way, I think there would be a better one. Thank you.