 BBC Marathi is launching its daily video news bulletin on GOTV next week. We think that's a really exciting development because it's the first product of its kind that exists primarily in the digital world, not as a TV bulletin from an international news provider in an Indian regional language. So we're very excited about that and we think it'll be a really good fit with the people we're working with at GOTV. I think BBC Marathi has a really distinctive mission to bring the best of our international news reporting from around the world to audiences in Marathi, but also to report on the most important national stories where the BBC can add value to what was already being done in the vibrant and exciting Indian news market. We think fake news is a big global priority this year and indeed also in India where we see a particular high level of concern around some of the toxic effects of fake news, real threats to people's lives and wellbeing. Sadly people have lost their lives in these vigilante attack incidents in recent months. So the BBC's come back with a concrete series of proposals, not just words, but to take action. We've commissioned some significant academic research to look at behaviours of young audiences around fake news, why did their share, what are their share, what's motivating them to help us understand the problem better. We're running a series of workshops in Indian schools in different parts of India which we'd like to roll out with a partner to a much larger scale. And then we'll be holding a series of events in the autumn in November to a conference and a hackers conference, a hackathon if you like, to try and hash out some tech solutions as well as some bold new ideas about what's doing the Indian market.