 From the International Telecommunications Union Headquarter in Geneva, we are celebrating the World Telecommunication and Information Society Day. This year, we're pleased to have with us Ms. Hilda Moutse-Équo, the Director of Economics, Tariffs, Competition and Consumer Protection, at the Zimbabwe Telecommunication Regulatory Authority. Welcome, Hilda. Thank you, Bilal. We're pleased to have you with us and would like to know from you your experience with the standardization program and the bridging the standardization gap. How did that affect you personally? How did it affect the region and perhaps the whole study group? Bilal, I must say that we are very excited about this bridging the standardization gap program. We've benefited immensely from this program and for me, I've been attending study group pre-meetings for many years and prior to that, I didn't understand, I didn't have a clue of what was happening. I only listened to the arguments, read the contributions, but I didn't know how to make a contribution myself. I didn't understand how to go about it, but now I think I'm almost a guru in that. Very good. And why is this important to your country, to your region in terms of being an active participant? First, I think it helps in ITU achieving its goal of inclusivity because it helps us, especially with developing countries, to participate more actively in ITU work and its deliverables. And I think that is very important. It also helps us improve how we do our work back home. So the information sharing and the knowledge about what others are doing helps you at home in your work? Yes, it's very helpful and we've benefited and most of what we take from the ITU, we always make sure we implement back home. Thank you very much and I wish you a happy World Telecommunication and Information Society Day. Thank you very much. We hope this program will continue.