 Babakar is a market gardening producer whose activity has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. The measures taken by the Government of Senegal to stop the spread of the virus have had real consequences on the production and marketing capacities of many producers. But they're not the only ones affected in the food system. Women food processors too have been negatively impacted by the pandemic. We have been波-riding so we have to stop working so that we can have the best work possible. Nature is normal in this world. But in reality we are not living in a normal environment. And this is the absolute need for us. If we're going to use the government's authority to help us, we are going to be disappointed. Because even if we pay all the money we are saying about our fate, we will be able to do good work for our country. To help these producers and women products transform us, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization has initiated Household Food Basket. We have also worked with F.A.O. on other innovations, such as the implementation of a digital project program, with the SAIDA platform, which has been regrouped by entrepreneurs, known as COMPRODUCTION, which allows commercialization. The project involves more than 700 producers, including producers, producers and women transformers, to boost the local economy. F.A.O.'s Household Food Basket initiative is indeed a bridge between producers and households in a situation of food and nutritional insecurity. We have a lot of people, including women, and women who are not very wealthy. F.A.O.'s Household Food Basket initiative is a bridge between producers and households in a situation of food and nutritional insecurity. I do my makeup everyday. Because I want to show my face the way I do it. I'm really a bit nervous today. But it's been long since I did my makeup. We went to the first meeting to discuss how we need to look. We also have to face the other two. We need to be able to know how we look. We need to decide whether to look or not. Household Food Basket Initiative targeted rural, urban and peri-urban areas. 14,075 vulnerable households received a kit consisting of local essential food products in eight regions of Senegal. Each household beneficiary of the initiative received a food kit composed of 8 kilo of market garden products, 5 kilo of fish products, 7 kilo of cereals, 1 kilo of enriched flour, 1,25 kilo bag of rice, 1 sanitary kit. This initiative in Senegal was funded thanks to a specific internal funding tool of FAO, which is called the FAO Anticipatory Action Fund. Often this fund works in context of drought, of predicted floods, of risk of desert locusts, but we applied it across Africa and in Senegal especially also for the potential consequences of the COVID-19.