 Today is Monday the 26th of June. In the morning we had the kickoff for the opening session for the 11th International Conference on Community-Based Adaptation. We had the Minister for Water and Environment, the Permanent Secretary for Water and Environment, senior officials from UNEP and IUCN, and Claire Schakia from IID and a number of other speakers. It went off very well. We then had a number of sessions, one on Indigenous knowledge and how to marry Indigenous and scientific knowledge, and then one on climate finance, which is always a very popular and interesting area. We are always short of finance and we have to think of ways in which we can enhance the flow of funds from the global to the national, and in particular to the very local level for our communities. In the evening we had a dinner hosted by the Government of Uganda and they are providing us with entertainment, which you might even hear in the background at the moment. We also did the launch of a new initiative called the Lease Developed Countries Universities Consortium on Climate Change, or LAP for short. It was launched by the chair of the LDC Group by Gember Endelow, who is here from Ethiopia. And it's an initiative that the Lease Developed Countries themselves have done under his chairmanship to bring all 48 Lease Developed Countries together in a capacity building development to address Article 11 of the Paris Agreement, which is on developing long-term in-country capacity, using universities as the vehicles for doing that. So we formed the consortium of 10 universities to start with, from 10 Lease Developed Countries. It's led by my centre in Bangladesh, the Independent University, together with Macarena University here in Uganda, and then we have another eight universities in different parts of Asia and Africa, who will then in turn link up with the other universities and other LDCs so that eventually we are able to engage with all 48 countries, at least one university, probably many more than one university per country, to develop their capacity, to develop long-term capacity building programs to tackle climate change, primarily adaptation, primarily community-based adaptation, but also on other aspects of climate change, including mitigation. So we're looking forward to this new South-South initiative, and we're looking for partners to know what we want to engage with us, and we're most welcome to find out more about it by contacting myself.