 We will always raise that a woman must take a Brexit. We have to suppress our views, we have to suppress our opinions, and that I want to change. I know that we've made a lot of progress as our country since the abolishment of apartheid in 1994, but I have to be honest, we still have a long way to go as women, as to voice out how we feel, how we view what our opinions are, and that to me is more important than anything. I want to be an advocate for other women. I think it's important that we pull each other up. I believe that gender equity is not just supposed to stop at me. I must pull other women. It's important that we all move together. So as women out there, we have to start supporting each other. We still have a long way to go as women in politics and also in leadership, and very, very importantly, is that we, who are politicians at this moment, need to hand over the baitin very slowly, but also very, I don't know, in a very good way right now so that we create a next level of young women in leadership, because what we don't want is that when we have to put down the baitin and we are asked where are these women, we cannot answer them because we ourselves did not groom or we did not even create a next layer of leadership. I think it's time that we disposed of what other women say that we don't pull each other up. It's important that we pull each other up. As much as we need the men to support us, but where I'm going, when I go back to my country, the first thing that I'm going to do is to make sure that I pull a lot of women to come and be part of decision-making positions. You find that in council you get those that are seasoned leaders, you get counselors that are quite new, but they cannot speak to each other, they do not speak the same language. So we need to just be in one house as women in leadership and speak issues that relate to women and see how we can pave a way because I feel in that way we can get a better solution, not just to sit as female councillors of one political party in our different corners. Let us come together as women from the same council and just remove the bars and those walls that are in front of us and pave a way for our community and for our generations to come. As women, when we get into politics we need to have active positions and we need to make ourselves active. I've learned something new. Sometimes you get into politics and you don't realise that you're actually doing kitchen politics where you're just sitting there and you've been sent south of each other women to come and do kitchen politics. You've got to take a big step and speak, be part of the change.