 Ladies and gentlemen, now I have this opportunity to invite to the podium Mr. Adik Rahman, director from Vikash, Bangladesh. Mr. Chairman, Honourable Chief Justice, friends, ladies and gentlemen. Once again, it is a pleasure to be here and addressing this concluding session. As Salina said, we have achieved quite a lot in this conference. Over 90 papers, 40 presentations, events, posters and the declaration coming out of it, the government declaration. Communities across the world are trying their best under very difficult circumstances. Climate change is here and now and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports on the Fourth Assessment and Fifth Assessment tell us that things are going to get worse. For things to get better, there must be much larger need for mitigation as well as adaptation. If we do not mitigate rapidly, particularly led by the industrialist party that is committed under the Convention, there will be much bigger need for adaptation and the cost of adaptation will shoot up so much that will really create greater poverty, greater distress for the poorest people in the world. That in itself does need a lot of attention. By 2015 in Paris, we should have agreed strong declaration for rapid climate action much higher as required by the science much, much higher commitment for mitigation. But at the same time, adaptation needs are soaring. People and communities are suffering, they are being displaced and in many places their food security, water security, energy security and life security is being threatened. So it is not a story of changes of lifestyle. Lifestyle is lifestyle for some and livelihood of others. We must not be put into that choice. Those who are responsible must reduce their emissions and reduce them fast and that is the place to make that commitment very, very important. If we cannot do it, then our problems are far bigger. There is already displacement across the world moving on to what is called climate migration. The numbers quoted are in tens of millions to hundreds of millions of people who will be displaced. Where will they go? There is one theory which says they will have to be accommodated by the countries which have emitted in-house. That is the most in a proportionate way. That is not a present future that we are looking towards but that would be a reality and climate health tasks become the greatest or one of the greatest issue of justice. Climate justice has to be addressed in the near future and poverty must be reduced. Climate change impacts and luxury of others cannot be allowed to increase the poverty of the many. Climate displaced population is being taken, the issue is being taken very seriously with the security community across the world particularly in rich countries. There is no mechanism that has evolved in the defence and security world which can stop large populations moving. Most of the ammunition that they have created is for killing people but not for maintaining in certain spaces. This is going to be a challenge of the future if we do not take climate change very seriously. For the poor in the communities it is not a choice. They are forced to take it seriously for their share of survival. Right now in most cases they are doing it through their own level, own money, own efforts. This we have already initiated through the CDA type process and other funding sources some initial very limited funding in this area. This has been significantly. So 50% of all climate investment costs and expenditure must go to adaptation and out of that 50% of that must be for the communities particularly poor and depressed. That is a key message from the government declaration and we permit ourselves that. We are going to look forward to working together with all the countries and the leaders and their respective communities and it is absolutely urgent that we mitigate rapidly at the same time we invest in adaptation otherwise we are entering a world of much greater insecurity. So we want a world with greater climate service, greater security and greater climate justice. We all look forward to that. Thank you.