 Thirdly, it was also very clear from among the participants that the registration process for collective rights, but even for private individual rights to forests, is long and onerous. And this process has to be made faster so that communities are able to get the rights that have been granted them by law, but also be able to exercise those rights in order to generate value from the resource. Securing tenure for a forest estate in Uganda is under two ministries. The Ministry of Lands, which has a role to play at the Ministry of Water and Environment. The Ministry of Land gives you the title to that particular resource or the land where the resource is situated. The Ministry of Water and Environment should come up and declare a resource as a community forest. So there's been back and forth between these two institutions, which I think then cause for some kind of harmonization process, probably to have the one stop center for that kind of arrangement, because while you move through the process under the Ministry of Lands, you have to move a parallel process under the Ministry of Water, and they never move at the same pace. So for the case we have, we have the land title to the forest, but the forest is not a community forest. It hasn't been declared. So it's like a yes and no for the communities. So we see that as a big encumbrance in the process of formalizing some of these tenure reforms in the country. Those guidelines detail the different steps, 11 steps that you go through to register and also declare for us. So we needed to, we need them to be disseminated widely because the feeling from the meeting was that they are known only to a few people. And therefore the other parties cannot move this any stage forward because they don't have a good idea of what is entirely those guidelines. When they are registered, then their tenure security is secured or enhanced. And when that happens, then you should be able to manage this forest well because it comes along with good forest management plans that have been developed. So if they're not registered, of course there are many opportunities, there are many benefits of registration. The fact that it can be, when you're registered then you are known and therefore your trade, your chain of custody for products traded from your forest is actually also clear and therefore you are sort of an authentic forest owner. So there are many benefits in addition to that that we can detail. The guidelines need to be disseminated. What does that mean? It means holding workshops in the different localities of the country and at the same time translating them in some local languages so that people can get them and come up to do what we want to do. There was also a thinking that they are too long that it caused for so much from the communities that there is a need to shorten them. So that one needs to be done and I think to a certain extent with collaborative forest management some steps have been taken to make the process a little bit simpler. So we made a recommendation for the minister to submit what needs to be registered. Minister of Lands promised that they are going to work on them and by December they ought to be having certificates whatever it takes they need will be issued out.