 Welcome to WRC 19, the World Radio Communication Conference here in Shama Sheikh in Egypt, where I'm very pleased to be joined in the studio today by Resin Khattar, who is the CCO and CQO of EB Lenhardt. Welcome to the studio. Thank you, Max. It's a real pleasure for me and I am really honored to be here on the stage. It's an interesting international event indeed. Okay, let's talk about EB Lenhardt. What do you do exactly? What's a little bit about your organization and why you're here? We facilitate the market access for private sector in general. So our concentration is on the European industry in general, automotive or medical industries, as a first, like row or stage and the scope of our business. What we mean by market access is a very small part of the general concept of homologation and compliance. So we support our clients to get type approvals or homologation or certificate of compliance worldwide. Our company is always presented on an international level. So our team was here before at WRC 15. For me personally, it's the first time. It's interesting for me to be here to understand how the frameworks in general move on. For me, there was a lot of questions before I came here. So what's going on in the future? 5G as a disruptive innovation or not? How it will affect the private sector? This is important for us for the future to catch the wave, let us say. In addition, I'm very interested to understand how are the social organisations involved here. Because I don't notice that there's a real participation from the social organisations or the activism. So social corporate responsibility, I believe it should be on the agenda or part of the agenda of the ITU in the future. What were you aware of this conference before? You mentioned obviously in 2015 the organisation was here. How does the work of ITU study groups, for example, affect the private industry? Actually, it has a high level of effect. Let me start shortly with your first part of the question. I am relatively new to the concept in general. When I joined E.B. Lanehart around five years ago, I didn't know about the whole concept. So these really like switches, red lights that involvement, maybe more media, more information should be like broadcasted about such kind of international events or even what's going on behind the scenes in itself. A private sector is always hunting to understand what the next regulation is going to support them or is it going to set constraints or obstacles in their way to move forward in the development. Especially we are talking now in the automotive industry about the 79 to 81 GHz for the radar system. So it's really interesting. For E.B. Lanehart, we tend to raise the transparency power here. So we developed our own system. It's Tamsas. It's a type of upper management system. It has been already used by many of our customers. So it's not even a platform that is being used to be to be also, but even to the level up to the second level of the customers. So OEMs are also reusing our platform. Our next aim is to have this platform used by authorities, which is important, because when authorities use the platform, it's not only about a sustainable development movement in the bureaucracy, but we are talking here about a higher level of transparency, which is very important for us. And the relevance of ICU study groups, which obviously the work is very much feeding into this conference, but why the wider ramifications of the resolutions of the reports, regulations, etc. Let us say, from our side, we are a little bit a step away from this part of the conference, because what we care about is the end effect or the final resolutions. This is what we care about. Now, I have attended many of the meetings. I'm here as an advisor. So just to understand how the mechanisms move, how countries reach agreements. It's very interesting. It's very important. Still, we are behind the scenes. We just try to understand. We try to follow up. We try to cope. This is what we do here in the private sector. And in principle, the conversations that you've been hearing, obviously very simulating, but do they make you feel you're talking about the advent of 5G and various other technologies that are coming to the forefront? Do they make you feel confident for the future, optimistic for the future? Well, sure, yes. I'm very optimistic, because let us say, I have been involved in other kind of activities on an international level. But I see here that there is a clear tendency to reach an agreement, which is important. Other activities might have a lot of other kind of political conflict of interest, which like raise the burdens to reach an agreement. But here I see there is real technical issues going on, real intention to reach agreements, which is very good and very important and which reflects that we humans will come together at the end. The spirit of consensus is very much engendered here at WRC 1990. Well, thank you very much for joining us and filling us in a little bit from your perspective, which is great. And hopefully we'll catch up with you again perhaps at the next WRC. Yeah, sure. Thank you. OK, thanks very much indeed.