 In a world without borders, we absolutely need international standards and the ITU is the only place to make them as all 193 countries come to the table, including my very own, Zambia. The BHG program is really, you can say, a catalyst in enabling and making our Indian innovators and technologists to understand what are the final nuances of the standardization ecosystem and standard development process so that they can proactively contribute and bring in value on those standardization tables globally. The big takeaway for me was the power of the microphone. I love that because it is important that you use your voice to voice your stand or your comment or your contribution and the only way that you presence can be felt in standard making is by use of the microphone. Yeah, it was quite interactive and I think it was quite real, I mean real type but it was so close to a real life, you know, standards meeting experience and I think the participants were attended. The standards this meeting, especially in the role play session have must have brought great things to learn basically about the strategies and the people's dynamics and how things and how actually, you know, your proposal can get dumped in or may be accepted at the last moment. So those are so many things that we have come to know. I come to fight to set the rules. The rules that are good for my country and good for my nature. I am here in New Delhi with my Asian colleagues to make new international standards.