 Well, it's the final day of WISIS Forum 2015 and I'm talking to Yaroslav Ponder, who is the Senior Strategic and Policy Advisor for ITU, also the man responsible, I believe, for organising the WISIS Forum. Congratulations on to you, Mr Ponder. Now, you told me at the beginning of the conference that you wanted to build on the fresh priorities that were developed last year. How has that process gone? Yes, this is the fact. We started the conference with several workshops which proved that the new fresh list of the priorities for 11 WISIS Action Lines have been very well adapted and transmitted into the operational level. We got ready the proofs that these new priorities and the fresh vision is already at the level of the implementation. And this makes us proud, in fact, of the consensus which we reached in 2014, developing the new sets of the guidelines for those who are working on the ground. And this is really what counts, because those people, those stakeholders are making a real change and making the life of the human being much better, more efficient and preparing for a better future. So, in the space of a year we've gone from the ideas from last year and already some of those are being implemented. Yes, this absolutely. And during the two days of the high-level policy statements, we also noticed that a lot of the fresh priorities have been already included in the messaging of the ministers, deputy ministers, ambassadors, CEOs of the companies. And this makes us believe that the commitment is continuously growing towards the WISIS process and the most important towards the implementation component of the WISIS process, which in fact aims at connecting all in the world. There are plenty of the new items which are coming on our agenda. This year we focused on the innovation component. And when we are going from the session to session, constantly we're taking a look at how people are using their power of the brains in order to talk about the innovation, about the real change and the real impact. And this makes us really happy to see. The theme of course this year was innovating together, enabling ICTs for sustainable development. Now, it's not all about last year's work. We've done plenty of work this year. You have an ambition to come up with outcomes by the end of the conference. Have you been able to achieve that ambition? Yes, indeed. This is the outcome document of the WISIS forum. We are sending the old delegates home to their capitals and to their cities with the good message that we are working very hard, but it paid off. We have a concrete set of the recommendations for the future work. We have series of the partnerships which have been established here at the forum. And the follow-up work will be happening just in the flow. In addition to this, we are holding a lot of discussions on how the implementation component of the WISIS should be debated and should look like beyond 2015. We launched at the beginning of the WISIS forum the WSIS SDGs, Sustainable Development Goals Matrix, linking these two processes with the hope that our voice of those implementing and working on the ground will be heard in the process review processes of the WSIS and the SDGs in order to make sure that we are advancing jointly the future ICT for the agenda. And this happened. We have already the feedback that this tool, which we put forward just for the comments, has been greatly welcomed by the top leaders of the ICT industry and by the ICT ministers and put on the top of their political agendas. So we believe that during this week we made a significant change in the global debate on how the ICTs can impact sustainable development and how we can reinforce our efforts in order to make much more in the field of the ICT ecosystem together. You've been involved with WISIS for some time. I may be not a fair question to you, but how would this year compare with others? Do you consider it a good one? Yes, definitely. For me this is the best forum I ever had. I had the pleasure to accompany the WSIS forum from its foundations. The beginning was very difficult to engage the stakeholders and to get them understood that this place is to make the real and talks about the real business, real impact on the development. And now it works. We have plenty of the stakeholders coming to us congratulating and in fact thanking for giving them the opportunity and providing the platform and for talking the business. And this is what counts because public-private partnerships is the future of the development and we hope that in the next coming years 2016, 17, 18 and in the new paradigm of the WSIS beyond 2015, the much more focus will be paid to the ICT for the agenda, which is the main focus of this platform. Well, Mr. Ponder, we thank you for your time today. Thank you very much.