 I will talk about, in these few minutes, youth in Angola, social and political transformation. This is some kind of personal research. It has no support apart from the University Institute in Lisbon where I was based at the time. So why youth in Angola and why this transformation is inserted also in a project based in Codesia, on youth institutes. We wanted to know what is happening or what youth are doing at this moment in Africa. And in Angola was the right moment because in 2000 this research took place last year in 2012 because we were celebrating 10 years of peace. It was a time for a balance. And we also had the general elections. So I wanted to talk through the interviews, through direct and participation observation, through bibliography and statistical data, what is happening in Angola. And the main question, the main answer that I got is that youth is completely, the country itself is pacing through very dramatic and very fast transformations. And what it was yesterday is not the same thing today. And youth in the middle of this, all this transformation is a little bit forgotten by not only the government, but also by the enterprise. We're talking about a country that 85% of the population is under 14 years old. So they come also the difficult to defend what is youth and what is not youth. It's a time of changing, of conflict, what I've seen that calls waitinghood. So basically Angola and youth are in that period of waitinghood. So I asked them what is the main differences between the past because we were celebrating 10 years of peace. So it was a time of balance and what is the main changes. So what can we say is that Angola and youth, at this moment, they wanted a better future like everybody. They're fighting for that. They're using now the new technology. And that seems easier, but in a contest, in a country, for instance, Angola in Africa, where the access to internet is very controlled, is very weak. So they're using all the means that they can to be heard, to be connected to the rest of the world. They're also using new methods like such, they're not writing because the education level is very low, but they're using the music, they're using theater, they're using new technology. For example, I gave you some examples of how they're getting together to complain about their situation. And only these two topics that were referred to by everybody that called the government or the government's attention and they started to improve new policies just to improve your conditions such as they created a project to build houses for them, to they spread the higher education out from Wanda because in 2019 it was concentrated in the capital, so we have 18 provinces. They started a program to improve entrepreneurship and then the youth was not happy yet and complaining and keep complaining and too recently, and this happened, that's why this work is still in progress, the president and the minister decided to listen directly to the youth so they decided to run all the country to talk to the youth and to listen to what their main complains. And the main complains of youth at this moment is employment although the education level is very, very low. So they're all worried about employment. So this took place this last weekend so I don't have results but the main complains I've already knew that because I've talked to them before, a year ago. So now the government is trying to, at least they say, it's what they're saying, in a country with such a high rate in the economic growth, why youth is complaining about employment because most of them are in the formal economy and that has to be changed. So what I can conclude about this is that they're interested in building a new Angola, they're interested in changing society, they're interested in being connected to the outside although the language for us is the main constraint but they're fighting for that. They're not just saying, well, I want this but I don't know how to and now they're looking for how to get there and these ways of looking for that call the government attestation. And I think we are in a very good process, in a very good, at least I'm optimistic and related to that. So let's see what is happening to these complains that the government, they were all more than 3,000 people in the same place discussing about this. So let's see, I hope things are going to improve but they're improving slowly, slowly, slowly, slowly but they're improving. So I hope, let's see within a year, I hope to be here to show what real improvements this took for us. Thank you.