 I have a specific question about migrants. Moldova, you received many people from Ukraine, especially Kazakhstan and Georgia from Russia after the announcement of so-called partial mobilization. How did you manage this enormous flow of migrants? How can they be integrated? And do you think they will stay? Will they leave? Are you a country of transit for this migrant or the country where they can stay for a long time? Can I start with Mr. Dasalya? Thank you. Thank you very much. First of all, I want to say that you talk about the Ukrainian refugees and then from other countries. I just want to say that Georgia is strongly supporting Ukraine generally, but as one of the dimensions of that was the Ukrainian refugees which are in Georgia and the government of Georgia is helping these people who are there. It's several tens of thousands, a small amount. And there is a different program to support this, including not only physically supporting the people, but for example, several Georgian schools are operating in Ukraine now for the children who are from this region, who are from Ukraine. But the major thing I want to say is that a lot of people, especially in the beginning of the war, who were in Russia, cannot go back to Ukraine, came to Georgia, Ukrainian, I mean. And we are continuing the support, of course. Now, regarding the people from Russia or other countries, there are several things which is important to mention. First of all, I want to... So it's important to understand that these citizens of Russia are one thing, but we have to divide indeed to different groups. You know that Russia has significant Georgian diaspora. It's around 800,000 according to the different figures. And Georgia is just for comparison, 3.7 million. We are talking about the people who lived in the 90s. I'm not talking about these traditional diasporas from different centuries. And a lot of them who are coming are Georgians, ethnic Georgians, who still have links to Georgia. This is one group. The other group is basically who are coming in the other neighboring countries of Georgia. They are living for this. So ethnic Armenians, ethnic Azerbaijanis, and so on. There is a significant part which is fleeing the regime on the ground. And there is the other force part which is using Georgia for a transit. Actually, two-thirds of the people who are coming from Georgia after two or three weeks are living in Georgia. So we understand that this could be generally, could be some risk, but these arguments were more important to the discussion of how Georgia had to deal with this issue. Thank you, Vice Minister Darsalya. Vice Minister Vasylenkov. Yes. Well, when Russian citizens come to Kazakhstan, of course they come into a country where Russian is also an official language, described so in the Constitution along with the Kazakh language, which is a state language. So that is one reason they do not face any challenge in terms of communicating. Secondly, of course, out of the 19 million people in Kazakhstan, three and a half million are ethnic Russians. So that is another reason why the influx of so far about 100,000 ethnic Russians to Kazakhstan has not been that dramatic. Initially, in September, especially when this partial draft was called, we had about 400,000 coming to Kazakhstan, but for now we believe about 100,000 remain. These are people who, a lot of them, who bring their work with them. They are IT specialists. They work online and through the years of the pandemics we learned that it is possible to work remotely. So that's what they do. But not all of them are IT specialists, so there are other professions and they seek jobs and that creates some pressure on the labor market, but it's not huge. What I think is important also to underline is that these people, when they come to Kazakhstan, they also get immersed in our own culture of living in a very diverse ethnically or religiously society that has more than 100 ethnic groups or 17 religions. And I think it's quite helpful for them to see with their own eyes what life is like in Kazakhstan. Thank you very much. Olga, what about Moldova? I think you are a small country, but in terms of the percentage of migrants, it was just a huge part, especially just after the beginning of the war in Ukraine. Indeed, since the onset of the war, Moldova was called a small country with big heart. After thousands of refugees have come to Moldova. Since the beginning of the war, about almost 700,000 Ukrainian refugees have crossed our borders. At the peak, those who stayed represented about 4% of our population. Currently, the number stabilized at around 80,000. Some people have moved on to the European Union, some people have returned to Ukraine, once Russian army left Kyiv. Now, this, of course, has put a lot of strain on our municipal services, on our healthcare, on our education, on our electricity consumption, for that matter, and obviously the border management. Thank you.