 This is Waterloo Refugee Day. It's a day I think has so many implications for people who are from refugee backgrounds. One is we are celebrating our achievements as a refugee community. We come here to Australia, we contribute to the society, we are celebrating that achievement at one hand and then on the other hand also we are remembering all other refugees around the world who are suffering, who are really going through difficult times and remembering them, showing our solidarity to them. People here are coming from different backgrounds and from different, completely different societies I can say as a minority group here and to represent themselves, their culture. It's a very good opportunity for locals actually to learn about the different cultures and different backgrounds which probably in the routine life they don't have the opportunity to do that actually. Sport is something which is very common and it's a common language. Sport obviously for lots of nations including our own is a big thing that brings people together. One of the big highlights of the festival here is that we have the finals here today in the World Refugee Day Cup. It's a day that's very much for refugees so the majority of people that are here will be refugees but there's also lots of people from the local community who come just to find out more about refugees and their culture and to experience the fantastic food and entertainment that's here today. This is the real meaning of the multiculturalism. You can see different food, different culture, different dress and different colour, very colourful these of the humanity here. Now as a refugee we are happy to enhance the support the multiculturalism here in Australia. It's all about like creating a multicultural society of people who are from different backgrounds as they come together. So it's telling our potential as refugees that we are assets for Australia.