 As Samuel Hall, we've been working with civil society organisations in Takuma refugee camp in Northern Kenya as well as fraternities in Kismayo Town in Somalia so that we can help them better understand and raise awareness on digital remittances and remittance service providers that benefit their community. What we've done is created a remittance clinic which is an online tool that allows CSOs themselves to go through a series of activities with local members so that these members then become better informed about remittances but are able to choose at the same time RSPs which are best suited to their needs. This is not just in terms of cost of remittances as well but also in terms of additional financial services that they can access for example savings or insurance products as well. So it's part of the ACPE migration action. One of the things that remittance clinic can now do is be used to educate both CSOs and refugee or returning communities not just in Takuma or Kismayo but elsewhere in Kenya, Somalia and across the region to be better informed about how digital remittances are used and the service providers that are available to them. So through this action now we can look at scaling up the platform across the region, across South Saharan Africa indeed and look at using this platform to basically support the use and distribution of remittances by migrants in their communities.