 You released a brief release two days ago, the board said only 25% of the rapid relation is due to the Internet. What effort can be taken by governments to increase Internet users? You're right. We need to make sure that Internet is available to all citizens of this planet. That broadband is available as well. We're about to reach the 5 billion mark in terms of mobile penetration in the world. This year, somewhere around September. What we need is to be sure that all citizens of this planet are connected to the Internet and to broadband. Broadband is a place where voice, video, and data get together. Broadband is a place where content and infrastructure are one. In order for us to reach that, we need to be sure that all governments put in place the necessary policy and regulatory framework that is conducive to competition and more investment from private sector, that they put the necessary capacity-building programs together that will also enable a better utilization of the infrastructure and facilities that are made and put in place. Last but not least, governments should be involved in creating content. The report also said training a sufficient number of teachers to use as these skills will make a challenge. Does ITU have any training courses that can help the teacher develop the IT skills? You know, we have had the Millionaire Development Goals with ICT. This is why, together, ITU and UNESCO have put in place the Broadband Commission just one month ago. We are targeting September 20th this year, where we're going to preview the Millionaire Development Goals in Europe and the United Nations. And we want to bring ICT as part of the solution. Together with UNESCO, we'll be able to use ICT to train the trainers and to train students. We'll enable a very wide and extensive coverage of number of students in the world to access their best education in the world without moving from their hometown. So that's what ITU is doing together with UNESCO. The report pointed the lack of local content. From your point of view, what is behind the little Arabic content on the internet? As you know, local content is driven today by some of the main Latin languages, French, English, that are on the net. The dot-arab will enable us in the Arab region to really reach out to many people who don't speak other languages. This is why the internet should be open to all other types of languages so that we could really have a really high development of local content. Before the development of local content, you're not able to have that widespread of the internet anyway. So therefore, there is a very important element here, a very big progress that has been made just last month by the launching of the dot-arab domain name. And I hope that many other language groups will continue, will follow suit on that.