 It's the fifth and final day of the WISIS Forum for 2015. This evening there'll be a closing ceremony, but today there's plenty of work to do with conferences and dialogues continuing throughout. Two of those discussions centre around the rights of and protections for children in a digital world. UNC5, one of the action lines of the WISIS, specifically declares the need for, quote, special emphasis for protection of children online, unquote. In relation to mobile financial services, because, again, women's... Representing phone and internet provider Millicom at the workshop on children's rights was Milka Pieterkainen. Millicom has been working for a while with UNICEF now on understanding our impacts on children's rights in a more... more broader sense. And in the past year or so we have been working on the ITU and UNICEF guidelines on implementing protections for children online, which is obviously a very relevant children's rights issue when it comes to the telecommunications sector. Some of the other workshops in the final day dealt with digital financial services, the role of broadcasters in the digital era and the ethics of digital innovation. But the big task on the final day is to bring clarity and substance to five days of conferencing and find out what conclusions they can produce. After lunch, the WISIS Action Facilitator's meeting began. The idea being to assess the general progress made within WISIS Action Lines. They also engaged with incorporating WISIS Action Lines with sustainable development goals. We no longer are land... Member of the Russian delegation, Professor Vladimir Minkin, was at the meeting. This meeting is quite important. This meeting concluded the result of one year implementation of each Action Lines. During WISIS Forum, there were discussions on each Action Line where all participants give examples of best practice, show their interest in these concrete Action Lines, raised challenges and also give some proposals what they want to go further. One of the promises that WISIS makes to those attending is that by the end of the forum, they will have a working summary of the outcomes. It seems quite an ambition. Did they make it? 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 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 fall. And the final word of the day and indeed of the week will come from Magdalena Gai, Chair of the WISIS Forum of 2015. This year is a very important year because we are preparing for the General Assembly of the United Nations in December and during this General Assembly we will discuss the WISIS beyond 2015. So this forum was very important and I can say as a Chair that it was great success. And so there we have it. A week of intense conversation, formal and informal in auditoriums and in conference rooms like this one. Delegates have been working hard on the theme of enabling ICTs for sustainable development and bringing closer their ultimate goal of creating an information society for all.