 You're building a hotel? Yes, also. Why are you building a hotel? Côte d'Ivoire is a touristic place and I was going to a cinémathia, you're going to see which is a coastal city and there hotels are beautiful and everything. But when I asked who that hotel belongs to, it belonged to a western people. Who that hotel belongs to, it belongs to Lebanese. Who that hotel belongs to, so few Ivorians were having hotels in those places. I thought myself, it's time to grab what belongs to us. So I thought myself, let be the hotel as well, because there is a lot to do. A round of applause, a round of applause, a round of applause. My name is Jean-Yibraq Bou. I'm an entrepreneur and investor here in Côte d'Ivoire. I'm running five different businesses. The most one is in transportation, as you can see. And all the people behind me are employed in that transportation business. I left Côte d'Ivoire one year and a half ago to come to Côte d'Ivoire to impact the society here. I'm also running a channel to share my investment here for everyone who is interested in. The name is the African Investor in French, University of Africa. My goal across Africa is to celebrate African excellence. My goal across Africa is to bring you successful Africans like John. I mean, John is my good friend. So that his story or their story will inspire you to go out there and be great. It's about time Africans start investing in Africa. Exactly. This is the right time African invests in Africa. I'm so glad that you are investing in Africa. Thank you man. See, I told him to come back to Africa. He told me, no, I love Dubai so much. Yes. And even the last time you came to Ghana. Actually, the last time I came to Ghana, I was planning to come back to Africa. And Ghana was part of the country I wanted to come back to. So then I was still hesitating. You know, you're in Dubai, good job, nice salary. The family was happy there. So I was still hesitating. So I was trying to find a place where I can still speak English to come back here. And then finally I just decided to come. I took the risk. He told me that Ghana is so expensive for you. Of course. That's not the truth. That's not the truth. Ghana was so expensive so he decided to come back to Ivory Coast. Exactly. And I'm so glad that you made it back to your country. I was hesitating between Rwanda, Ghana and Ivory Coast to be honest. So I chose Ivory Coast because I think I know a lot of people here. I know the environment. I know how to invest here. And I already started investing here. But then the message I wanted to share. Most people in the diaspora, when they want to come back to Africa, they only think about their country. You see, Ghanaian living in the U.S. When they want to come to Africa, they only think about Ghana. So I wanted to share another message. Let's say me, I'm from Kodiwa and I go, I stay in Rwanda. That's still Africa. So most of the time you can have like some problem in some country and people living abroad that we say we cannot go back to our country because there are these problems, that problem. We have 54 countries in Africa, even 55. So just pick one that is good. Ivory Coast is a very good one to come and stay in Africa. How long have you been back? One year and a half. And what have you invested in your country so far? Wow, so many things already, I think. So many things. In one and a half years? In one and a half years. So many things. So the first investment that I've done is transportation. Okay, I've been doing it. The thing is, when I was living in the diaspora, I was investing already in Africa. So I started having like few taxis, five, ten. And then I came back to expand it. So when I came back, both like 50 taxis, I ordered 200 ones that we come soon to be able to employ more people. No, wait. You ordered 200 cars? 200 cars, yes. These are the cars that we've seen, that's to us. Yeah, these cars. These cars. 200. 200. And then they are coming part by part. The good part is when I was starting the investment, I showed to my community the investment I was doing. And some people from the diaspora, they came, they say, yeah, let's invest together. We want to invest with you. Because, you know, most of the time when they invest here, there are so many scams and everything. So people came with me to buy the 200 cars. So you are not alone? I'm not alone for the 200 cars. Different. It's going to be different people being together and we're going to share the company. It's going to be like a massive company that we're going to put in place. But for this one, I started it. And then more people will come and we're going to buy more cars. If you invested in 200 cars? Yes. I mean, these are not ordinary taxis. No, no, no, no. This is more like an app. This is an app. Right now, we're using two different apps, which is Uber and Yango. No, the app is like someone wants a taxi. You just order the taxi, the taxi comes, you pick the taxi and go. So we are building our own app because 200 cars is better to have our own app. Exactly. So we're going to have our own taxi app to be able to... So I guess if you have 50 cars, then which means you've employed 50 people? No. Because one car is driven by two drivers. So we employ right now 100 different people. One driver drives during the day and the other one during the night. So that's how we make a lot of profit. So it is with 200 cars? So with 200 cars, it's going to be 400 drivers. But that's not the end. The most important part is like one family here is composed with four different people or five different people. So 400 people, 400 drivers is a family of like 2,000 people. So with that business only, we're going to be able to feed 2,000 people. And that was my goal when I was coming back to Africa because in Dubai, I was having a good job and everything but I was not meaningful. You see, I was only in one company doing small changes in that company. And then I come to Africa with only one business able to employ 400 people and feed 2,000 people. I think that's great. And that's why I'm telling people, come back to Africa because here, man, we have more impacts. You know, we can impact more lives. We can impact more people. We can give dignity to our families. That's my goal right now. That is the most important thing. That's the most important thing. To impact in a society. Let's go back a little bit. Okay. Were you born in Ivory Coast? Yes, I was born here 37 years ago. So I stayed here till my 17th. And then after 17 years old, I went abroad to study. So first I went to Morocco when I studied statistics and informatics. I was supposed to go to France but back then, I didn't want to go to Europe. That was not my dream at all. So I needed another African place where I could learn and study. And Morocco was part of it. So I just like, I didn't know the culture there. You know, most of the time we say North Africa is not really Africa. So I went there to study but at the same time to discover the culture there. So I stayed there for five years. Five years. And after that I went to France to study artificial intelligence. That was the main reason why I went there. So even there after my school, I was like, I want to come back to Africa. And then here I got graduated when I finished it. I was supposed to come. And that was the same here. We have some trouble in Côte d'Ivoire where we had like two different presidents. You know, we have like one former president that said he won the election. The new one also said he won the election. I was some trouble. Not that much, but yeah. So then I couldn't come back. So I thought myself, let me stay in France and get some experience. So I stayed in France for seven years. It was supposed to be two years only for experience. Really? And I stayed for seven years. So what were you doing in France like for that seven years? Were you working? Yeah, I was working. I was working because thankfully I got like a nice degree. So French people, they wanted to employ me. I would love to say that. I would love to say I was like a security guard. What do you mean by a nice degree? But nice, I mean I was like I was having like a AI degree. AI degree, good. I was there. I was having a nice life, a nice time. And the thing is I was terrible in personal finance. So I was spending a lot of money. You know, you are young, coming from a poor background, because I'm coming from a poor background. The only thing that took me from the poverty is studying in school. When I say poverty is a kind of poverty we didn't even have food sometimes. Wow. And they were like shutting off the electricity on us in the apartment. Because my dad, like Adia... How long did they shut electricity on you? Like for weeks, sometimes. Then long, okay. My mom can testify that for us we had no electricity for one complete year. One complete year? A whole complete year. I was not poor. The same way as you. So when you made money, you wanted to live the life that you never got a chance. I never got a chance. So then I was travelling, I was buying everything. I hope you didn't spend money on women. Thankfully, I was going to church back then. Not even now. But yeah, let's say I was going to church. So I was kind of having like a... But you were just spending lots of money. Yeah, I was spending on myself. And then I was also trying to invest in Africa. So I was spending money to build a house. I got like scammed. I sent like 15,000 euros to build a house here for my grandmother. My aunts just vanished with the money. And my first business... This is not my first transportation business. I started in Gabon. I invested 30,000 euros in Gabon in 2012. I failed. I completely failed because I was new in the business and people scammed me like crazy. So at the end, when I left Paris in 2016, I was having a debt of 60,000 euros. When you were leaving? Yeah, when I was leaving. 60,000 euros I ended up with. But in the first place, why did you leave Paris? But at some point, you know, you're in Paris. I was not feeling... I was not having meaning in my life in Paris. So I was trying to find a place where I could go. So I was thinking about Africa. But then my wife wanted to discover another place. She's like, yeah, let's go to Dubai. Let's see how it is and everything. We had a chance and we went to Dubai. I was not a big fan of Dubai. To be honest, I'm like, everything is artificial. Everything is already developed and everything. But then I just followed my wife. When I say to people, they're like, you followed your wife and everything. Yes, I followed her. I had to support her in a new job. So this is how we ended up in Dubai. How long did you guys stay in Dubai? We stayed in Dubai for five years. What were you doing in Dubai? So in Dubai, I went there. I was doing the same job, thankfully. Because there was also a very demanding job there. So I was getting also a nice salary there. Very nice salary. I guess it was nicer than Paris. Of course, it was nicer than Paris. Dubai, they're crazy. They paid a very good salary there. So I started in Dubai. And then in Dubai, I was kind of alone there because I didn't know anyone. When I went to Dubai, I was only speaking French. Not a single word of English. Only French. Hello, good evening. How are you? Like you in English right now. Hello, good evening, how are you? So I was only able to do that. So my first job interview was crazy. I went there, I went with a book like this. And any time the interviewer was asking me questions, I was like, look, this is it. So this is how I got my first job. It was very well paid. I think in a year, I was getting like $140,000 yearly. That's like monthly $10,000. Well, with that money that you were making in Dubai, I mean, if I were you, I would never come back to Africa. So many people told me, you're a foolish man when I was telling them I was coming back to Dubai. Even my family, they were saying, if you come back to Côte d'Ivoire, if you come back to Africa, we'll not go to the airport to welcome you. Are you mad? Why would you come to Africa? This complicated place. You have everything in Dubai. I was having a nice life, very good salary. Everything was fine. Even my boss told me he was like a Turkish man. He said, why would you go to Africa? And there's nothing there. I used to stay in Dubai here. You make money. At some point, I was living in Dubai. My heart was in Africa. Africa was really calling me. It reached a point where I was living there. My body was there, but my spirit, my soul, everything was there. There was one event that even changed everything. Who was that? He decided to come. I have two sons. The first one is five years old right now. The second is three. My son is going to school in Dubai. Most of the time, he's the only black people in the class. He used to say, I'm the only brown. I'm the only brown. One day, my son was playing at the yard in the park. I was going back to take him. On my way to take him, I saw different kids around. They made a circle. There was one kid in the middle. The kid was saying, do it, do it, do it. When I came, I saw my son in the middle of this doing the monkey sign. All the kids around were white or Arabs. I saw it. My kid was a child back then. He was only three and a half years old. There were other kids, a little bit bigger. They were asking him to do the monkey sign. He was doing it, and they were laughing. So I saw it. I literally broke my heart. I'm like, I don't want my son to live and think that he's part of a minority. Most of the time, the diaspora, this is what happened. We are the minorities, so people think that we're part of the minority. So when I saw that, I just came back home. I told my wife, pack your stuff. We're leaving Dubai. And that's how you ended up. This is what I ended up with. In every course. In every course. Now, I want to welcome you to every course. Thank you very much. You're back home now. Yes. Are you living or you're surviving? What is the difference for you? I mean, living your best life. Surviving is like trying to go to work, get money, come back, spend on your family, and that's okay. No, no, no, no. I was not thinking about surviving when I was coming back to Africa. I was not coming back to Africa to be an employee. This is what I keep telling people. Don't live in the diaspora and plan to come to Africa to be an employee. You come to Africa to be an employer. So it's someone who will employ people. So I knew it from the very first day. Because, you know, with my degree, with the salary I was earning there, if I come here, of course they're going to give me like shit salary. Exactly. So I was not planning to come and survive here. So when I came, I had a plan to build all those businesses. So I came and then I'm just running those businesses. I'm working on those businesses. And I can say I'm living my best life, not because of money, but because I found meaning in what I'm doing to life. You know, I found meaning to life. Every day I wake up at 6, 5 a.m. I slept like around 10 p.m. sometimes. But I'm happy of what I'm doing, you know, because you see the guys, they're happy. We came here, we give them jobs. This is all they want, you know. Sometimes they work for other communities. They are not well treated by them. So my goal was to come here, find jobs, give them like very nice workspace when they can be happy. And they're really happy. The people working with me, they're super happy because I'm putting so many things in place for them. So that make me feel very proud and happy. I always thought that I was putting something. Yes. Africa got a lot of challenges. Africa got a lot of problems. Come to Africa, find our problem, bring solution and become a billionaire. That's what I'm doing right now. There are so many problems here. There are so many problems. The thing is in West, every problem has been solved already. Man, I was in France. I wanted to build a business. I was thinking, what business am I going to launch? Finding a problem was not easy. Dubai is the same, man. They built Dubai like crazy in a few years. But then I come here in Africa. Man, I have 100 ideas of business because there are so many problems. And everything has to be built. That's the thing, you know. So you said it and I really liked it. Guys, come to Africa, grab. This is how it lands. It belongs to us. So you come, you see a problem, you find a solution. Then you get the money. I wish Africans can start grabbing Africa the way they grab their wives. They have girlfriends, they have side chicks. This is how it is supposed to grab Africa. I love the fact that they are employing women. Yes, this is what they are. Bonjour. Bonjour. Just see my lads. Oh, you know my lads. Oh, I'm sick. Oh, no, no. Okay. Just see happy. Just see happy to see you. Okay. We are very happy to see you. And we have like five women right now. The other one are working. Why are you employing women? Because we have to give women chances also. And then you're going to see women are the best drivers. They are very careful. If I open her car, her car is very clean. So let's check it out. Let's check it out. Open the car, you're going to see. Look. Okay. I think some people went there. But then you see she had like two shoes. She had a perfume. You cannot feel the perfume. No, you can. You can even smell the perfume. Yeah, you cannot smell the perfume. Ah, merci. Sabo. Sabo. No, no, no. Sabo. How do you say? That's very good. Yeah, c'est très bien. Oh, c'est très bien. I hope we're going to have like one language for all Africans very soon. I just hope so too. English and French. I think it was the plan of the colonizer. Exactly. Exactly. I live in Ghana. People from Ivory Coast, Benin, Burkina Faso, they all speak French. So I can't communicate with them. Yeah. And then you have Côte d'Ivoire and you have Liberia and Sierra Leone also. So we cannot really communicate with them. Thankfully we have Mali and Burkina. So it was made in on purpose. So we have to be beyond those barriers. That's why I really like you. I really admire you. Because man, you don't care about boundaries and borders. You go anywhere. That's very good. For me, Africa is home for Africans. Exactly. Yeah. Whether you speak different languages, I'll come to your country. Even if I don't understand how to say languages. Exactly. What are the kind of opportunities do you think it's here in Ivory Coast that people need to invest in? Okay. So the thing is all sectors here are opportunities. Wow. Yeah. That's one thing. I don't like saying to people, because you come, you find a problem, and if you really care about that problem, you're going to get money. You see, I came. I saw the problem in transportation. I'm like, we are almost five million people in Côte d'Ivoire, in Abidjan. And we only have like seven to eight hundred cars for five million people. I'm like, man, there is something we have to do. So for me, Côte d'Ivoire right now is a land of opportunities. Wow. There are so many opportunities and the government is working also to bring more entrepreneurs. Wow. So of course, the first thing is to do it. Yeah. But I want to know if the business you're doing right now is profitable. Of course, man. This transportation is one of the best profitable business here. That's why I started with this business. I'm having other business also. I will let you know. So the good thing is you buy a car and from the very first day, your car starts generating money. With 50 cars right now, we're generating almost 50,000 dollars per month, which is $600 per year. And then after 18 months only, I get all the money back. After 18 months. So then, instead of taking the money and building a house, an apartment, a villa, I told myself, let me buy cars. Let me start employing people. And then with that money, I'm going to build a hotel. I'm going to build a house. I'm going to build everything. So with one money, I can do civil and business. And the thing is after 18 months, those cars, we're still running. We're still running. So transportation is fast, it's quick, and you get money quickly. You're building a hotel? Yes, also. Why are you building a hotel? Côte d'Ivoire is a touristic place. And I was going to a cinema fiat. You're going to see which is a coastal city. And there, hotels are beautiful and everything. But when I asked, would that hotel belong to? It belongs to western people. Would that hotel belong to? It belongs to Lebanese. Would that hotel belong to? So Côte d'Ivoire, we're having hotels in those places. So I told myself, it's time to grab what belongs to us. So I told myself, let be the hotel as well. Because there is a lot to do. A round of applause. A round of applause. A round of applause. A round of applause. So that's how I started building a hotel. This is how I keep on telling Africans to take control of what belongs to them. You know, we need more Africans investing in Africa. It doesn't matter. Even if you're from Ghana, I think I need to call upon a Gambian guy who built five resorts in Gambia to come to Ivory Coast. Because I think we need Africans investing in different African countries. I mean, my own mentor, Taf, invested in Nigeria. Exactly. My first investment in transportation was in Gambon. And I was from Côte d'Ivoire. And people told me, why do you go and invest in Gambon? It's still Africa. Thank you. I don't need to invest only in my country. Thank you. But then I failed. How many business I made that you failed? No, I made five businesses. I failed before. So I started investing from 2010 to 2016. It was only failures. Wow. Only failure. My first business was selling drinks. So the thing is I was living abroad and investing in those things. So, you know, doing business with your family and all these types of things. So I was selling drinks. It failed after shoes. Doing shoes also. It failed. Yeah. Selling shoes. It failed. My first transportation business where I invested like 30,000 euros failed as well. I had construction also. I wanted to build a house for my grandmother. Failed. Completely, completely failed. I started farming. So I did farming where I needed to have like one 10,000 chicken. Wow. Failed. So in 2016 I was like, man, there is something. So I was blaming, I was blaming my family, blaming the people I was working on from all those years. And at some time I sat and said, okay, what is the problem? It can't be only the other people. Maybe I'm the problem also. So then I find out because I was not good with money. My personal finances was like a mess. So then I understood the problem was not the other people, but it was mainly me. And sometimes too, I always want to tell the diasporans when you live abroad and you send money for people to invest. Yes. For you, it doesn't work. Exactly. I don't want to talk about myself too much because this video is not about me. But I also send money back home for my family to start up a business was when I lost my father in 2017. Believe me, when I came back home, I was not even a dollar waiting for me. Yeah, I hear that. But I have to come myself and then start everything by my own self and look at where we are right now. So yeah, sometimes you need to come here and invest in your own business by yourself whilst you sit down and watch your business grow. I totally agree with you and what I keep telling to people your family is not qualified to do the business. Most of the time, when you want to invest here, when you live abroad and want to invest here, you want to invest for your family. Exactly. And naturally, you said my family has to take care of the business. But I think they are not qualified for the business. They don't know how to work with the money, how to take care of all those things. So when you give them money, most of the time, sometimes they are suffering, sometimes they need money and everything. So I told people, stop investing with your family. I started having success in my businesses when I stopped working with my family. It's sad to say, but yes. So now I'm doing everything in the structured way. There is a structure, we have a company declared, we pay taxes and everything. So at least that's what gives a broad vision of a very good business. We start doing small business with family here and there. You also invested in restaurants. Yes. So I started investing in restaurants and the good thing that I've done, most of the time when people want to invest in a business, they want to be on their own. You see? So they come here, they want to invest in restaurants, they say, let me build my restaurant. So me, I think that union is strength. So I came back to Côte d'Ivoire. I wanted to open fast food. But I said, before opening a fast food, let me see if there is not someone else who does the same. So I found Olivia Agree, she's having like a very nice fast food which is called Dabali Express, which is selling only Ivorian and African food. So I wanted to meet her. I said, let's partner. Let's partner. Instead of me having my restaurant on my own, you also on your own. Let's partner. I'm going to open a lot of franchise of your restaurant. I don't care about like me being the entrepreneur behind the idea and everything. Me, I just want to invest money and employ. So we partnered recently. We went in the news and everything. So now I'm opening like three of the same restaurant they opened. And this is what we should doing. Most of the time, African when they invest in Africa, they like small businesses on their own. Small businesses on their own. Although the Lebanese, the Chinese, the West, when they come, they build a big company. They put the money together to build a very big company. We have to start thinking big instead of us having small business on our own. Let's have one big business that employ a lot of people. That's what happened with the car. I bought the first cars. Some other people came and said, let's create a company. And then instead of 200 car, we're going to buy 2,000 car to a lot of things. And then it's going to be big. You see, right now I'm employing 110 people. The people in the office for the transportation. But the restaurant also is going well. Then we're building them right now in two, three months it's going to be done. And you're also building an amusement park. Yeah, an amusement park. That's also one of one sector really like lucrative and that bring money here. When I came back, my kids used to love water park. You know, in Dubai it was going to water park every day almost. And then I came here, I was looking for water park. There was no water park. There were like very few amusement parks. And I told myself, let's do something here. This guy is actually proving my statement. Exactly. Come to Africa, identify the problem, solve it. You're my brother man. You're my brother. What has been the biggest challenges you came back? Yeah, the biggest challenges. I think because I was coming for business is to find the right people to work with. That was very, that was tough. You know, when you come, you expect a specific level of knowledge and everything which you don't meet on the ground. So that's why it took me more time. I was supposed to roll up my plan like in six months or one year maximum. But then I wanted to make sure that I was having the right person, the right people around me. So you know, now thankfully I got few people and then everything is running well. And that's the biggest challenge. And sometimes also the mentality sometimes. You know, when you come back, people expect you to be giving money everywhere. You know, when they see me, come on, you rich, give us money. I'm investing my money. And literally I'm investing everything. So sometimes I want to live like a simple life. Exactly. People don't get it. Why would you come back from Europe and live a simple life? You don't give money. You don't give money, you don't give money. So my family right now is a bit mad at me. But I'm like, let's meet first build and after we can give the money. So those are the two challenges I met here. You regret coming back home? Absolutely no. Absolutely no. And I wish I did it before. Really, I wish I came back 10 years ago. 10 years ago. Man, it's the right time right now. I think it was the right time also before. So I'm super proud. I'm super happy of coming back. Really. I don't regret anything. And some people even say, you have to come back to Dubai. I say never. Last time I went to France to stay there for five days. Man, I was so sad. I just wanted to live quickly. You know, I was living in France, Dubai. I just wanted to live quickly. So I see myself so in Africa. Even when I travel outside of Africa, I don't feel good. I really don't feel good. So I'm so happy. If you have a message to Africans, especially the Francophones living in the diaspora, I have to say it in French then. Please do. Please do. I can say it in English later. French. OK, let me say it in French. Salut à tous ceux qui me regardent. Je suis la preuve vivante qu'on peut quitter la diaspora pour venir vivre ici en Afrique et faire des choses. Là-bas, regardez la vie que vous avez. Vous levez tous les matins à 4 du matin. Vous ne voyez pas le soleil. Vous dormez à 23 heures. Vous ne voyez pas le soleil. Vous n'avez pas de signification dans votre vie. J'ai envie de vous dire que l'Afrique est le présent. Les gens disent l'Afrique est le futur. Mais c'est le présent. Ce n'est pas facile. Il y a des difficultés. Mais si on ne le fait pas, qui va le faire? La plupart du temps, les gens se plaignent quand ils viennent en Afrique. Il n'y a pas d'hôpitaux. Il n'y a pas de système bancaire. On ne peut pas faire ci. L'école n'est pas bonne. Il y a tel problème. Mais qui va résoudre ces problèmes si c'est nous-mêmes? On ne peut plus compter sur les Européens pour résoudre ces problèmes à notre place. On ne peut plus compter sur les Libanais. On doit commencer à compter sur nous-mêmes. Donc c'est avec vous que nous allons pouvoir le faire. Venez qu'on puisse investir ensemble. Venez qu'on puisse vivre ensemble en Afrique. L'Afrique nous appartient. C'est à nous. Et c'est à nous de prendre possession de ce qui nous appartient. Sinon vous savez ce qui va arriver. Dans les prochaines années, nous serons des étrangers sur notre propre terre. Nous serons étrangers sur notre terre. Come now. This is the right time. Africa is not the future. Africa is the present. It has always been the same. So Africa is the present. And it's always been the case. So come now. My chance is for the African investors to go and see all the investments I make. And it will really inspire you. And I'm waiting for you on the other side. Africa is calling right now. Don't say that I did not tell you. I'm telling you come now. Me, I'm not selfish. That's why I've taken it upon myself to go from different African countries just to let you know that it's possible to make it in Africa. Bring that money. Bring that skill. Come and invest here. And become a billionaire. And when you become a billionaire, please give me some of your money. No worries. Because I inspired you. Don't just say what am I inspired me to come. Inspire me with money. Okay. So I want to thank you. You're doing a very great job. You're not done. You're not done. You're not done. If you have a chance to change one thing in Africa, what will it be? Change one thing in Africa. What will it be? Poverty. Wow. Yeah, poverty. So people sometimes ask me, why do you do all those investments? My main goal is to get money to be able to help others. Wow. Man, when you drive in the city, you see some kids, they come to your car, they ask you for money. Man, I don't like it. So I'm not very proud of it. So when you see that, we're not going to count on the Western to come and fix it. So my goal is to create orphanages and other stuff and work on that sector. The money of the business, we just go there. Yeah, I don't need a lot of money to live. Yeah. A few money, I'm okay. Yeah, okay. So poverty, we need to change it because poverty can get you mad. It can get you mad. I've been there. Yeah, exactly. And I know how it feels. I hope you all enjoy this amazing episode. Please, first of all, like this video. He has a YouTube channel that he talks about investment in Côte d'Ivoire and Africa in general. So I mean, it's in French. So if you are a Francophone watching this video, go and subscribe to that channel. But also, I mean, everyone can subscribe. Yeah. And support. I mean, it's all about seeing the videos. But what he's talking about. But we're going to put English subtitles very soon. Very soon. Very soon. I have to move here and come and learn French because I feel like the Francophone audience need me because I will always tell you guys the truth and I want to tell you the truth that you can understand. So there, I've recourse pour parler franc... Francais. It's good to say. I was almost there. What time are you going to say again? Vier on Côte d'Ivoire. Vier on Côte d'Ivoire. Pour parler français. Pour parler français. Yes, good. But very soon, only one language. We're going to get rid of those. I love you all. Thank you so much for watching. And please don't forget to subscribe and be part of this awesome channel. I'll see you all in the next one. Bye. Thank you, bye.