 What you see down there, there is an idea for now the apartment development, how I will suspect them, not around here. This is an event that is very important for us today here. We are here to launch the long-ass control operation in Durkhani. The first invasion of the tested locusts in Durkhani was in mid-March. Those were swarms that arrived here and they were looking for places to deposit their eggs. What we are experiencing now are hatchlings, which we call hopas, or rather in the biological terms, they are called nymphs. And these nymph stages is what our focus is to control. Now, with the investment levels of what we really have even now of the hopas, going up to 200 sites already identified, very massive indeed. And therefore we expect a lot of destruction on the browse and vegetation, which is the key source of livelihoods for the Durkhani people. Locusts come as an army. So when you want to go and fight an army, you have to also go as an army. We want to control them as fast as possible before they reach Insta-5 and young adults, who will start again maybe copulating and laying more eggs. So we need to control it very fast because the more you delay, the more they mature and the more disaster. That will come. So you have to deal with them very fast. So far we have already four teams. Each team has got a surveillance, a spray, and then each team again is going to be based in the sub counties so that they would be near the targets. Those are the plans which are in place. And I think the cooperation between FAO support in terms of their facilitation, the government initiative of pushing hard in terms of supporting the spray, ground spraying systems, we are prepared. And I think with the systems that we are put in place in a strong way the way it is now, we are going to finish it up. The challenges are that the desert locusts come in huge numbers. And if you delay the operations of controlling or containing them, either at a hopper stage or at a swarm stage, they can fly into another area and they fly back. Together we can make sure that we will not be overcome. We may not completely eradicate but we will put them under control and ensure that farmers continue but we also strengthen our civilians' efforts. They are not going to end. So we can specify a specific date that by this date they would go. But we can simply say by this date we have contained to a large extent what could have been a disaster. Beyond supporting farmers in the short term, in the long term there is need for strengthening their farming capacity with extension, with recovery efforts, provision of seeds, beyond just our control efforts. So when we put together our assessment efforts, the recovery efforts, they are meant to make sure that agriculture continues and the fight against the hunger is strengthened so that ultimately through Ghana can become food self-sufficient. That's the hope of everyone.