 Hello, everyone. Today we have the winners of the Visits Project Prizes 2013. On the left side, I have Mr. Mukesh Hajjela, CEO and Vice Chairman from NICT in Dori, India. And on the right side, I have Mr. Santiago Amador from the Ministry of ICT's Colombia. My first question will go to Mr. Mukesh Hajjela. How actually this social enterprise NICT was created? And what is your advice in order to ensure the proper coordination amongst stakeholders and particularly governments? We have created this social organization in the hunt of sustainability for the telecenters, in fact. The telecenters or in India we call it common service centers, all are struggling for the sustainability. And what we try to do is to marry the entrepreneurship with this ICT project. And if we can do that, we can create a business model, enterprise business model which can sustainable. And it is in the hunt of the sustainability for the centers we have created this organization. In fact, my advice to the government is that they should strengthen the information and communication department and every department of the government should have a spoke from ICT department. So have to have better communication and coordination. Thank you very much, Mukesh. And my next question will be to Santiago. Will it be possible to provide more information about the project in my language and why this project is important for the ministry? Okay, in Colombia we are a diverse country. So we have 96 indigenous communities living there with 65 different languages. So we are into promoting the preservation of the languages in Colombia which is very important for us. And we think that ICT is a perfect tool to do it. Those languages are missing every day and we are trying to put some knowledge and technology in order to preserve other languages. So we accompany the indigenous communities to make themselves lessons. We don't put anthropologists, they do the work, the communities do the work. We just accompany them and provide the technological tools to do it. They make lessons we put in digital and then we help them to share. And David has three different phases. The first one is to build the lessons and to build confidence and trust between the indigenous and the government to do it. At the beginning, for example, the platform was so close, the indigenous asked us to close the platform. But now they want to share that knowledge even in commercial platforms like YouTube. The second phase is we did a big Latin American but mostly Colombian indigenous and Afro-Colombian forum to discuss what to communicate. If the communication is important in that communities and they say yes and they make an agreement. And we start to teach or accompany the communities to encourage us to produce digital content. Not closed lessons like at the beginning but digital content in every platform, even using cell phones or something. And the third phase is we're going to build 12 production content laboratories which allows the communities to produce anytime and to edit some content. But we don't want to make a TV set with big cameras. Just a few devices and methodology to produce a lot even with cell phones on small cameras and produce sounds and videos. This is the third phase which is very ambitious. And I think I have to say thanks to WISIS and to this prize because when they know in the government, even inside the government, I work for the government, even inside the government you have to convince the other policymakers to put money and to believe in that kind of project. And I think WISIS was a very, very important platform to get more money and to get confidence from the government to continue doing that. Thank you very much. And actually it will be my next question. What does it mean for you to win this prize? It is a success of all the grassroots social entrepreneurs. The change agents what they are working at a grassroots, they are doing tremendous work. And I accept this award on behalf of them only. This award is dedicated to them, they are the grassroots level people, those who are really bringing change for the community, for the people living there in far flung villages. They are doing their business, they are earning their employment as well as they are doing public good. So this is, I feel this award is a success and a celebration for all those people who are working at a grassroots level and dedicated to them. Thank you very much Mukesh. It's very nice to know this. And Santiago, do you want to add something? Yeah, we are implementing a big and ambitious plan of technology in Colombia. My name is Biwe Digital, live digitally. There are a lot of initiatives and projects, like kind of 92. We are connecting, really connecting the country. We were just 20% of the municipalities connected to broadband and to fiber optics. And now we are going to pass to 96% of the country connecting to the fiber optics. And we are doing some many changes, mostly for the base of the pyramid for one, two and three economic strata, which is the 88% of Colombians. So we are making a revolution, but the revolution cannot be just for the urban people or for the rich people. We are trying to put the internet service of, I don't want to say poor people, but people for the one and two and three strata, for the base of the pyramid. And this project, it's a clearly message that technology is for all. With indigenous people and Afro-American people who live in Colombia, we have to build confidence. It's kind of slow. This process starts a few years ago because you have to, at the beginning they say they don't want to be in touch with technology. They say this is going to destroy the culture. But in particular, internet is not destroying the culture. Maybe the mass media try to destroy the culture because they want all of us to be the same. But internet is based on an economic model, which name is niche cultures. The internet is based on the difference of other people and internet can attend every need of the people, every niche need. So the indigenous, I think they are understanding that the internet is a huge tool. And now they ask for the government to communicate public policy for indigenous. And we are working on that. And this project, it's a part of a big policy. And I think the basis, the pillars of the confidence are already building. So we are trying to move on. And this project is so, I don't know how to say it, but it came in the right moment. Because we are trying to do the next step. The next step is encourage indigenous to produce a lot of content, not just a few, but a lot of content. And use technology in everyday life and share the knowledge and participate in the knowledge society. Sharing their beliefs and their recipes and their concerns and their claims, everything. And I think and I hope that next year when I come here again, because which is fun. When I come here again next year, I think the indigenous are more empowered and producing a lot of content in all kind of platforms. Thank you very much. Thank you very much Santiago. Thank you very much.