 Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for joining us for this information session on COVID-19 or coronavirus. As you may have heard in the news, this situation is serious. We need to ensure the safety of the detainees, your safety, and that of our visitors. By now you all know COVID-19, its symptoms and hygiene measures you can take individually to prevent it. If you have any questions, our health colleagues are organizing information sessions. It is important that we all work together and coordinate our efforts with the local authorities as well as the Ministry of Health. Detention facilities are at a higher risk of quickly spreading the virus as we all work or live closely together. To keep you and detainees safe, we will need to make some changes to our daily work. It is worth remembering that the only way COVID-19 can enter our place of detention is through a person, detainee, staff, or visitor. Doctor, could you please remind us of the basic recommendations? Yes, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, firstly everyone including staff will be screened for symptoms every time they enter our facility. If you or someone you live with show symptoms of COVID-19, you should not come to work and you should inform your manager. If a case is found among staff or detainees, we will work with the health authorities to see who else might be at risk and may need to be isolated. For staff, this may need having to stay off work for a period of time. Moreover, please respect the rules of hand washing, covering your mouth and nose with your flexed elbow or a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Staff who may work in contact with detainees infected with COVID-19 will be provided with proper safety equipment to protect themselves. When it comes to detainees, we may need to isolate those presenting symptoms to make sure the virus does not spread further according to agreed plans and standard operating procedures. Detainees will be told to inform a member of staff if they have a fever, cough, breathing difficulties, sore throat or runny nose. If you are told by a detainee that he has COVID-19 symptoms, you should keep the detainee away from others and inform health staff immediately. During this time, please pay particular attention to vulnerable groups, including elderly detainees and those detainees who are already being treated for other illnesses. Their good health is our good health. Thanks doctor, we have drafted a contingency plan to see how daily operations have to be adapted to prevent the spread and respond to a possible outbreak. In particular, we will need to plan our staffing arrangements carefully, as some staff may become sick and will not be able to come to work. We will also need to plan how we run the detention facility if there any suspected or confirmed cases appear. This includes the need to review the activities detainees take part in during the day. Some may need to be reduced or shortened for their protection. Moreover, regarding family and legal visits, physical contact between detainees and visitors may need to be stopped. If the risks increase, visits may need to be cancelled for a period. In that case, we need to replace visits with telephone or video calls. We will need to inform the detainees as well as visitors before they travel to the detention facility. Finally, we also have to organize the possibility for the families who usually deliver parcels to keep doing so with sufficient safety precautions. Regarding detainees, all new arrivals will be screened by the health care team. We will talk to judges, prosecutors and lawyers regarding the postponement of court appearances or trials to limit or even suspend them if the situation requires. It is crucial that we inform everyone concerned, people detained, their families, contractors, visitors and the local authorities and media. In the facility, we will also need to review our isolation procedures, access to showers, outdoor exercise, toilets, catering arrangements and the delivery and service of meals. We have to see with our budget and our head office if we can have enough funds to get more hygiene items. Soap, running water, disinfectant and masks for sick detainees. If needed, we will prepare our own chlorine solution to disinfect our premises. Moreover, we need to make sure that hygienic and sanitation practices are properly done in all the areas, including in the yards. Part of this will be creating hygiene committees and making sure they are given proper training and supplies. Could I ask the maintenance team to immediately look at the ensuring and the separation of detainees, a proper ventilation and access to water and sanitation and improving this where needed. We also need to ensure that rubbish is collected and removed frequently from the facility and disposed of safely. In that regard, maintenance and technical teams need to be reinforced in coordination with the municipality and services providers. In case of needs, we will establish backup systems accordingly. Any question, ladies and gentlemen. Sir, what about the distance we need to put between us? There are cells where there are more people detained than the number of places. There are measures that we can take already. We have decided to stop large groups of detainees coming together in exercise areas, canteens, workshops and religious buildings while maintaining access to fresh air. We will also seek to minimize all non-essential movement within the facility. Moreover, arrangements for the release of detainees who have completed their sentence are also being discussed at national level in order to reduce overcrowding. Any other questions? What is the procedure to treat a detainee who is infected with COVID-19? A detainee who has COVID-19 symptoms or who tests positive for COVID-19 will be isolated or sent to hospital depending on the severity of their symptoms. It is important for COVID-19 patients in isolation that all their usual daily needs are met and that they are treated well. We all follow good hygiene measures. You do not have to fear catching COVID-19 from them. When in contact with those detainees, you should always wear protective gear. It is very important that you put these items on and off properly. You will receive training on this. If you are ever unsure, please ask health staff for guidance as using the protective gear wrongly can leave you at risk. Ladies and gentlemen, dear colleagues, let's not wait any longer to get ready. We must be prepared in advance to know exactly what to do. Let's work toward ensuring humane and dignified treatment for people detained here during this period. We will be holding regular information sharing sessions with detainees, between us and with visitors. It is very important to keep detainees informed to reduce the risk of misunderstandings and tensions. I thank you very much for your solidarity. Again, the better we manage this in our daily work and ensure respect for preventative measures, the more everyone will stay in good health. Again, the good health of detainees is our good health.