 We're here at Beyond 2015, the Global Youth Summit in Costa Rica and I'm very pleased to be joined by Mr Ronan Espinosa, who is Vice Minister for Telecommunications for Costa Rica. Mr Espinosa, thank you very much indeed for being with us today. Thank you very much. Thank you very much for being in Costa Rica. Well you've been very much involved in this summit, in the whole build-up to it. I wanted to find out what it's been like, what the journey's been like now that we are very much in the throes of the summit and has it lived up to your expectations so far? Yes, sure. We're very surprised. We're very very happy because we have more than 500 young leaders, young entrepreneurs, creative people working here. Each corner on this building is full of new ideas, full of dialogue, full of people sharing very interesting thoughts about the technology and the importance of how to deal with new technologies and how to use the technology as a tool for human development. It is very very interesting for us also, not just having the 500 people here present, in the presence here, but we were looking at the statistics like 10 minutes ago and we were looking that more than 150,000 people are online working, cooperating with their ideas for the summit. It is very interesting, people from 169 countries were today working directly online. The advantages of the information technologies of the internet is that there are no borders. Now we can share, we can discuss, we can dialogue, we can have smart dialogues between young leaders and between people from everywhere. The digital divide is still a problem in some of the countries but this kind of initiatives is a very important way on how to go forward in terms of having more ideas and more people working together from different parts of the world. This summit is not just about young people, it's for young people and it's by young people. The energy that is being felt here both in the rooms and in the corridors and as you walk around the venue is quite palpable. I wanted to ask you, have there been any moments that have stood out for you? Have there been any comments that are going to be making a difference to the way that you see things from now on? Yes, sure. Today I was looking that we have more than 10 million tweets on the hashtag beyond 2015 for this summit, for this forum. So in every corner here there are a lot of good ideas. It is very, very amazing in how you can see a Costa Rican guy, a creative guy, very young, who developed an application for the App Store called Potatoes, which is a game. He was talking today with Kofi Annan on the internet. They were just talking, having a dialogue. So this is very, very amazing. The energy here is very contagious. We are really, really learning a lot and one of the main objectives of this summit was to do something different what the United Nations do as a business as usual for selling in some way. To change the way you have the dialogue, we need to learn from the young people. We need to learn from the direct contact between people from different cultures. This is the place to be. Very quickly, the 9th to the 11th is not the end of the summit. It is going on for three days here, but the message that is being constructed here and composed here is going to be taken by the President of Costa Rica to the General Assembly of the United Nations in New York. Has anything like this ever happened before here in Costa Rica? No, this never happened before. In Costa Rica or in the world, I think this is the first time the ITU and United Nations and a government, in this case Costa Rica, is working in this kind of project. The purpose here is to have a document to give to the United Nations level assembly, which will be held on last week of September. The President Laura Chinchilla and the Secretary General from the ITU, it's to have this document presented at the General Assembly. And it's not as a document typically 200, 300 pages document or a speech or not. This is a document which is a very, very practical document. This document will reflect the vision of the young people, not the 500 here, but a lot of more people that are sharing ideas with us from different parts of the world. This is very, this is innovative, this is innovation, and this is a different way to have young people talking and sharing ideas on how to resolve the problems. Laura Chinchilla, thank you very much indeed. Thank you very much for being in Costa Rica. I hope that you enjoy your stay here and I hope this event is not just one in a lifetime. I hope it can be done again in the next years. It's very important for having the participation for people in remote areas where now we have internet and to eliminate some of the borders. We have the physical borders. On the internet we can share, we can build alternative and innovation, we can build new ideas and new ways of having and confront the problems.