 We are now at the first day of the harm reduction conference, European harm reduction conference in Bucharest. And we have now a registered number of 360 people, which is much more than we expected. We cover hepatitis C, HIV, we cover prison, we cover new psychoactive substances, we cover topics such as homelessness, mental health, sex work. It's the first time in our local history in the harm reduction field when this kind of event takes place here. We can see a very serious divide, a regional divide in the European Union. We are really having an emergency situation in many countries, a crisis, where harm reduction services which were established in the 2000s completely collapsed. And this is partly because of change in funding environment, also partly change in political environments. In Bulgaria, needle and syringe programs completely stopped. There is no needle exchange anymore because of lack of funding. In Hungary, we still have on paper many needle and syringe programs and some of them really operate. But the two largest programs were shut down, actually, which served more than half of needles distributed in the whole country. Here, where we are in Romania, we know that clients served by needle exchange programs in just this year dropped from 7,500 to 2,000 people. We have to struggle to keep alive our services. But I think this is something that everybody should be aware of and not be very comfortable thinking that they have resources for now because tomorrow you never know. Isentres. Isentres. A lot of Isentres is very good. We are having a generalized talk out regarding the AJV treatment in 11 hospitals now. Starting with the last days of August, we start to miss the AJV treatment from the hospitals. I received some participants bring me donation and I will send it. In comparison with 2006, there were I think six organizations who were providing harm reduction services. But by the time they closed you to lack of funding because the financial budget decreased by 65%. The harm reduction services in Bulgaria stopped in July 2017. After the global fund, we drove the country. We don't have any exchange. We also don't have any testing on the streets among the group of people who use drugs and sex workers. And we don't have also case management which is a very big problem because usually people who we are working with are very marginalized. Can you tell us what Haryacht is about? Haryacht has been a three-year project financed by the European Commission and it's about harm reduction, a scaling up, intensifying, advocating for harm reduction, especially in Eastern EU countries. The main lesson we learned was that we cannot really make changes in harm reduction even with the big EU project without governmental involvement. Because if government does not support harm reduction programs and if government tends to close NGOs, then we cannot come from outside with trainings and teach people how to do testing when the government doesn't find these activities. I see a handcuff on you. What does it represent? Yeah, that's about criminalization. Here in the conference, we bring campaign, chase the virus, not people, campaign by nine original Eurasian networks of different communities. And we all recognize that criminalization and discrimination is the key barrier for HIV response, hepatitis or TB response. If you are paying unemployment wages, paying all the services, OST, NSP in the highest level, it costs several times less than you are just keeping person in prison. In Germany and in some other countries, Great Britain also, we have a high prevalence of overdoses, also of opiate overdoses, also fentanyl. I don't think that the situation will be the same as in North America, but we have from 50 to 75% of all drug-related deaths are opiate overdoses and we have to develop the right services for that, drug consumption rooms, naloxone and some other things. Drug consumption rooms prevent overdose, the prevention of HIV, hepatitis C and other blood-transmitted disease. You have no more people in front of your house using drugs in the streets, they have proper access to a safe, hygienic and stress-free environment. The benefits involved in the community and the harm reduction are that we know what happens first, fast. For example, in Glasgow, we had a peer-to-peer naloxone program, gave out more naloxone in one small area of Glasgow, they gave out 1,200 units in 11 months, which was more than every single professional gave out in the previous year in the whole of Glasgow. What is drug tracking? What is it about? We propose people who want to consume drugs or consume drugs to analyse their drugs. We can identify especially new substances sold on the internet and also be careful about phantomies, for example, and to be sure that we have not such big problems in the United States, in France. What does harm reduction mean to you? It's a philosophy, a notion, that sobriety is not for everyone. Not all people need sobriety to function. Some people need drugs to function better. Harm reduction is not only about drug use, it's about how you interfere with other people or institutions or situations. So it's a way of thinking, of living and working.