 My name is Rahim Anjaili and I'm the director from YUMITA. YUMITA is a network of communities living in the natural forest and they're based across the country. So these communities are formed into groups and the groups are involved in various range of forest users. We have the beekeepers, we have charcoal producers, we have farmers, so it's a wide range of forest users and then these groups come together to manage a certain forest around their vicinity. The vision is to see these communities, these farmers, these forest producer groups benefiting from natural resources, managing those resources sustainably. So for the communities we're working with and the project, we're supporting them to reduce charcoal in a sustainable way which does not destroy the forest, it does destroy the environment. They had a training that enabled them to identify market, also got skills on business management and also finance management. So that was an eye-opening for them because it was never least seen in YUMITA in order to build it eventually. I have been in the field since I was little. I work in the field. I am from Saidi and I am a teacher. I am from Saivi. I am a teacher here. I was born and raised in Nikisha. I am one of the first to learn and I am still working. My parents were born here in Zambia. My parents are very good at teaching. And we put it in a pot. I first have been caring for my husband for months and a few days now. I've been caring for him for the whole family. Now, in the midst of the heavy rain this year, I thought he would help me with my job. I won't be feeling too tired because he's not as good as today. We need to start to take care of our children. I'm a part of the family I live in. We need to take care of the children according to the regime. Our children are from the Meroesa family. We are where they live and are from the Meroesa country. I don't live on the Meroesa side. My children would serve in the Meroesa community. This is where we first lived in Bad Mirisha. Now I'm heading to the village of Aten lawsuits. We started to keep our house clean. We decided to move our house to Tongawiza. The village of Tongawiza is where our house is. The forest is where we move our house. Bad Mirisha is a place that is our family and we moved our houses to Tongawiza. Now, we are starting to take our house to Aten, I have two babies, two babies, one female and one male. The first one is a female, who has a 2-year-old child. The second one is a female, who has 2 years of age. They have a 2-year-old child and have children. The fourth one is a female, who has a 2-year-old child. The second one is a female, who has a 2-year-old baby. We can cut our hair with our frontline. If we have a good cut, we can remove it automatically. If we have a good cut, we can give the best we can. If we have good cut, we will give all the money to ourselves. We will give the best we can. We will give our best, we can give the best. We will save the children, we will save the family, and we will provide for the children we need. This is Sustainability. we are hopeful because our mode of working is to make sure that communities go on to their progress, within the absence of community leader, in the absence of FFF. So the training that we provide to the communities, it tends to make them build the capacity and skills, introducing them to market so that they can be able to even go there in the absence of community leader. So when we are out of the picture, they still have the skills, the capacity and the knowledge and the network so they can go on to implementing their interventions without the need of us. So we are very positive about that, they can manage because once money flows in, you won't cut that flow so you'll be able to go ahead. Generally, this program has really came at the right time. We have a lot of communities out there who are engaging in businesses but in the traditional way. So this project or this program will help them improve their business skills, make the business more comfortable but at the same time protect their resources because that is where they get revenue from. So it will give them a sense of ownership and a sense of responsibility. See a very good potential to scaling up these interventions on other sites because Tanzania is blessed with a vast amount of natural forest and we have potentials on funding opportunities from different organization institutions and also it's going to help society, the decision makers, policymakers to really understand that producing charcoal is not applying, charcoal can be produced sustainably.