 I'm very happy to be talking to Roland Espinoza. He's the Vice Minister for Telecommunications from Costa Rica. Thanks a lot for coming along. You have just liberalised your telecommunications market quite late. How has that worked? We moved in the last four years. For example, four years ago we had a penetration of mobile in Costa Rica of 60%. Four years later we have now 130% of penetration of mobile. The same is happening in the internet service providers. We now have more than 120 internet service providers in Costa Rica, which is really good considering that we have only four million and a half inhabitants. Is there an advantage in coming to the liberalisation process relatively late? We had the opportunity to learn from what was going wrong in some of the countries, which is the better legislation, what are the changes we have to move on. It gave us some time in the last four years. We just had our national broadband plan, our national telecommunications plan, our national eGovernment master plan, and we're transition to digital television. It is good to be late when you learn from the others' experiences. Because many other people have learnt that replacing a monopoly with a liberalised system doesn't necessarily for the consumer result in massive savings. Yet you can learn from that and have a market that's more heavily regulated to prevent a cartel developing. Yes, we analysed very interesting experiences in other countries and our model is different than in other Latin American countries. It's more like the European model. We have a difference between the regulator and the policymaking in the executive, so that it's a very interesting difference between the Costa Rican model and the other Latin American countries. We have an incumbent company, which is owned 100% by the government, and after one year of opening the market, this company is still more than 80% of the subscribers. Okay, now in September you're hosting a really interesting event with the ITU involving youth and ICTs. What are you hoping to achieve with that? We have been working with the private sector and the multi-stakeholder model in designing some public policies related to cyber security and teaching how to use responsible social media for young and children. Okay, thanks a lot. We're going to have to leave it there, but thanks a lot.