 He started early like many others of his age, his age group at the time. Just to remember one who, I think, he did a bit of things together, Vijay Mwanda, and he started early as the youth in the struggle for independence and then went on to do so many other things for the country for us all, beyond after liberation the occupied key positions during the infancy in the building construction of our nation. So we thank him for that. Obviously as you know, fairly early on he was minister of finance and then returned later on to be minister of finance again. And so we thank him and his colleagues, many of whom are gone and for what they did that benefits all of us to have an independence then and obviously the advancements that they made as you know after independence infrastructure in main areas they were responsible for that construction, health, education and everything else. Including the policies that some of us go to school to university free of charge. It is them who designed those policies. So we thank him for that and I know the laws beyond the family, immediate family, extended family, all of us are in mourning. And I want to ask Zambian as always to mourn ABC, peacefully, aggressively, respectful and for me most Zambians are unaware that they have a long relationship with him. At one point we saved together on the backless boat, found him there with again a colleague of his, friend of his, Bruce Munyama. I joined him on that boat and later on I became the chairman and I still saved with him. And he had that commercial economic side which was extremely good but he had a social side. I remember when my wife came back to our last born son, she was in the queue then at Minibank, a place called Minibank clinic and ABC walks in there, finds my wife holding a baby. He didn't figure out that was my wife. I said, whose child is this one? So my wife answered and said, HH is child. HH is child. He just picked the child and held him in his arms, went into his pocket, gave him some money. So most people are not aware of that relationship and many of us are hard with ABC but he was a man of many talents, different things. So remember, his good works live on. The best way of remembering ABC is to advance the interests of the nation because these were nationals. So that's my advice to young people. Work together, take this country where it should as those who came before us, ABC being one of them, did. It's our duty to carry on. We wish that you'd have been alive but God gives, God takes. We want to respect God's decision. Thank you. Thank you very much. We have done politicians, wetlands, and today needs to draw from the life that our former finance minister lived. Public service is not for sale. It's for the people. Number one. Number two, we must give in our best. Anytime, all the time that we are asked to save the public. Because we do so by choice. When we do it by choice, we must do it with conviction that we must offer our very best. Number three, to be resilient. We were chatting with my colleague, my friend here, you know, Walyangandu, that ABC had a long life, long career. Resilience, on and off and staying the course. So many do that we say, but these two. That's what I think young people must do. Because in the resilience sits patience, sits patience, focus. Thank you.