 Q. And particularly the water supply as it relates to health, because we have the bean hazel, sick duration, and if you want to ... A. Yes, well, if we can talk about health, let me take you back to the beginning. When I started to practice, as I told you, my major practice was in the eastern district, Denry. I had to go to Denry every Thursday, because that was the day for court. Sometimes I used to stay, I was not married then, but that is not for the reason why I stayed in Miku. I had my farm up there. Every time I pass on the road, you see probably two or three, five persons, trekking the road to Denry, from the Mabuya Valley to Denry, with plastic flowers and a little box, no bigger than a shoe box, a coffin for a child. So, let's start again. As I told you, I used to come from Miku or Denry. Denry going up, Denry to court. Miku probably coming down. And invariably, you see, this is the group, the man with the box of white drum in his pocket, and he's carrying on his shoulder a little box, the size of a shoe box. The mother running beside him with some plastic flowers. A child going to be buried. Why? Water-borne diseases, dysentery, diarrhea, rampant in the Denry Valley, perhaps elsewhere, and I'm telling you what I used to see. This was my own experience. So I decided, hell, I've got to do something about that. And what was worse? In 1966, Maurice Mason, who I mentioned earlier, my best friend, representing the Denry Valley, go to Denry Valley, drink water, and dies from typhoid fever. So what do you do? You have to do something about it. So I decided really, they had what they call PHEU here, and the PHEU, they said they want to drill wells and putting a little plaster over a big bobo. I decided that we have to do something. So when you came in, the only places that you used to have portable water was in the middle of castries, we call central castries. And there was a pipe going to Marsha where everybody used to go because at one time, some people used to have horses there, and the horses had to drink water. So the only castries, and Vierfort sometimes, and Souffre had always had ample supply of water. Now, these are the only places of water. And the question of the infant mortality rate in St. Lucia from water-borne diseases was one the highest in the hemisphere, probably only less than 80. We had typhoid, dysentery, diarrhea, palhazia, and you name it, water-borne diseases. So we decided to do something about it. And again, if you follow me, you see, we are doing it outside of the civil establishment because they are too slow to react. So we created, first, the central water authority so that water, we could have water throughout. We could call WASCO or WASSA, whatever they call it now. Well, even in my time, it became WASSA because we added sewage, which was CWA, the Central Water Authority, so that we have the question of provision of water in the... in St. Lucia was centralized under one authority, the CWA, and we started to expand the water throughout. Now, if you did not expand the water, you couldn't have the development. First, the water is healthy. You had to expand water. So we expanded water first in every major town, then in every major community. And look if we didn't do that with the banana industry and the fertilizers and the pesticides and the nematocytes and the pollution of the rivers. You know what would have happened? What the disaster we would have had in our hands? So all of this took careful planning and foresight. We expanded the water. They had, Bilhazi was a major, major killer. We couldn't do it ourselves. And all these things, I'm telling you, that we did in St. Lucia. It was done in St. Lucia. We had a lot of help from other agencies and organization people. Again, let me give help to France with the credit. Hunter went to a health conference somewhere and he met with some people with the Rockefeller Foundation and he introduced them here. And the Rockefeller helped us to put water in the first areas that were heavily infected like the Mabuya Valley and the Kaldesag Valley, put water in those areas so that we can get the people out of the river because generally it was the washing in the river, people getting attacked by the snails, getting into the intestines and that's the end. So we had the Rockefeller to assist us. Now, as we, it was sandpiped in those days. Everybody, not everybody, people, the poor people went to the sandpiped for the water. Now, and they used to have what they call the free-ness. People go in public baths, etc. That's fine. That's how we grow. We grow up gradually. So we expanded water. Now, when the United Nations declared 1980 as the decade of the water in 1980, Senutia was one of the few developing countries that met the criteria because we, as I said, expanded water throughout the countryside. Eliminated Bilhazia, Thai forge fever, you don't hear about it again. Dysentry and Senutia now has the infant mortality rate. People, children who died before the three years, Senutia is one of the lowest in the world, 17 per thousand. It's the same as the United States or any other developed country. So there we are.