 From the ITU Headquarter in Geneva, Konnichiwa. We are celebrating the World Telecommunication and Information Society Day, May 17. Konnichiwa, Tsigawa-san, SG3, Kicho. Thank you very much, Bilal, for giving me this chance. Tsigawa-san, we are celebrating the World Telecom Information Society Day and this year the theme is bridging the standardization gap. You are the chairman of Study Group 3 in ITU that works on tariffs, economic, regulatory and financial issues that are very important to both regulators and operators. You're also a senior manager in KDDI, a Japanese operator operating in Japan and around the world. I would like to hear from you what are the important aspects of the BSG. You have been chair of over the past six years. How did the bridging standardization gap help you as a chairman of Study Group and also as a KDDI executive? In fact, as far as my position is concerned, I'm chairing a Study Group 3. It's handling tariffs and economic issues. So I really wish to need the needs from the customers and users. But unfortunately, from the parent group as Study Group 3, it's the distance between this organization and the end users a little bit far apart. So in this case, to grasp exactly the real needs of the customers and users, the existence of regional groups is very, very important. And in fact, Study Group 3 has established a regional group for the first time maybe. Among the, amongst other study groups. And we can make full use of it to absorb and catch the real needs of the end users. And as we are now intensifying this effort to have the opinion from end users through this channel of the regional group, and it's very, very effective. And when after we have started this, after we have put emphasis on these activities, the number of contributions and number of the participants have grown significantly. Mr. Tsigawa, you are also a Francophone. Yes, absolutely. And you have a number of delegates in your study commission of Africa and other Francophone countries. What do you want to say, share with your audience, Francophone? Well, maybe I am now talking about the distance between the study group 3 as the parent group and then the need for clients. And unfortunately, maybe the distance between the final client and our organization is a little bit, how should I say, distant. And to be this distance more narrow, I would like to use the existence of regional groups because they are almost as close as we are to the end user. So through this channel, we could have exactly what we want, what the end users and clients need. So the fact that you have regional groups reduced this gap in normalization from a distance point of view, from a language point of view and from a regional point of view that can be diversified. Exactly. Very good. Now I would like to propose you to say a few words in Japanese to your participation in the Japanese, including the celebration of the World Telecom Day and the information society. Very good. Voluntary. Hello Japanese people. Right now I am in the study group 3 of the SG-3. I always feel that as a standard, the distance between the SG-3 in the group and the user in each country is quite far away. In order to increase the gap, the SG-3 has a lot of regional groups, but this has been very effective, so we are able to find out what the end users are thinking and what the needs are. So as a SG-3, the SG-3 has a very high regional group. Mr. Chigawa, SG-3, thank you very much. It's my pleasure. Thank you very much for inviting me to this opportunity. Thank you very much.