 Our final award for the evening is the International Rolliston Award. This award is first presented actually at the third international conference on the reduction of drug-related harm, which I think is what we used to have to call it in order to get it funded. It was presented in Melbourne in 1992. This is a real legacy award for us. It's given to an individual group or organization that has made an outstanding contribution to harm reduction at an international level. Now we had an incredible ray of nominations for this, but the absolutely outstanding one was the nomination for the Ukrainian activists, organizations and service providers, maintaining and continuing services throughout the Russian invasion of Ukraine, so please come up. I feel that I need just to name the cities from which our activists came, and you've seen it in the news and very horrible pictures you could imagine. It's Kharkiv, Poltava, Donetsk, KFK region. And these all people from Ukrainian harm reduction organizations, doctors and nurses, in the situation of war aggression started in 2014 and scaled up absolutely awfully in 2022. These all people providing services, providing true harm reduction. We are back to understanding of harm reduction as a comprehensive approach which includes evocation of people from bombings shelters, providing shelters, providing food, providing food and sleeping bags for kids and families. And that's all done by nurses, doctors, harm reduction activists under the bombings, under missile attacks. And it's not stopped. Today, our husbands, cousins and sisters are under the risk of being killed, being soldiers protecting the country or being civilians just living in the country. And I need to say that this fight of Ukraine against this evil empire, Russian empire, is the fight for human rights. It's the fight for non-repressive drug policy. It's a fight for freedom of all people in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. And we all understand this very clearly. I need to say that these people, and not only these people, it's hundreds and thousands of people, outreach workers, psychologists, who are meeting people in the mental health crisis, meeting people in the desperate situation, providing help. We are all felt this unity. We are all felt this true solidarity these days. And we are grateful to all global community, harm reduction community, for this global solidarity. And despite the fact that the war is not ended, and we will need to win this war, we believe in this victory, we need to free all our people who captured, like Maksim Budkevich, who is captured in the prison, human rights activists working for our community. We need to free all these people. And actually today is our Easter. And we are saying, Christ is risen and Ukraine will raise. Now we will ask you first to stay with us to remember all the people who died in this war. Unfortunately, there will be many more before we will win this terrible war. And as our anthem is saying, Ukraine haven't died yet, Ukraine will survive. And we will sing a bit of our anthem, please support us with this. That brings our opening ceremony to an end. There's absolutely a joy to be here with all of you. Let's bring some of that strength and solidarity down to the exhibition space and enjoy our time together. Welcome.