 And gender experts are advocating the need for better women inclusion in security and peace-building processes, especially in rural communities. At a two-day conference organized by the West Africa Network for Peace-Building, the experts urged government and relevant organizations to enable women build capacity in the field of peace and security. Government should involve more with women groups, particularly at the local level, because they are the ones at the entry point where conflict emanates. They see the signs, they observe the signs and are also able to notify security agencies on these things they've observed and what can be done to nip conflict in the board. So this critical role of women should not be isolated, but state actors should work with the women to ensure that peace is promoted, particularly within communities in Nigeria. Women are the peace table. All they think about is the women's situation. All they think about is what is coming to them, but a woman at the peace table is looking at the intersection of other women that are there, what their needs are and also on and so forth. So we're talking about the woman who is there in the other community. She thinks about the fact that there's no hospital. She knows that there's a hospital here, but the man will be thinking about, let's be a bigger hospital. She knows that in that other community there is no school, there is a school in her community. So she brings a lot of those sensitive and germane issues to the table, to the peace table. By reason of the woman being the homemaker, God have already adored the woman with those kinds of responsibilities of making peace. So bringing their knowledge and the capacity building that they have been passing through in this process, it will help them come up with peaceful solutions that will help produce peaceful platforms in our rural communities for positive development. Hello. Thank you very much.