 I would like to invite Dr. Kosmaslakis and Zawazawa who will provide introductory remarks to our first panel that is indeed on Europe in the world of open source. So good morning, ladies and gentlemen, for those who are online. Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening. It is a great pleasure to be here with you. I could not miss this great opportunity to be among the engine that drives the world. I come from the International Telecommunication Union, the oldest United Nations organization established in 1865. We have a federal structure. We have a bureau which is responsible for radio communication. When you see any satellite going up, it has been registered with us. Spectrum is our business, standards are our business. I heard the development sector. So I believe sincerely that impacting people is all about what we do. Anything that we do must have as an end result, an impact of people, whether they are in a list of developed countries, in small island developing states, in the developing world, or in the advanced world of the world. And I think open source is beautiful in the sense that it signifies collaboration and cooperation. And thus I heard some people saying that you are still small as a community. Small is great. There is a greatest part in being small. That's why jewels are usually very small. So it gives me great pleasure to open this first panel at this remarkable gathering. Allow me from the onset to thank and congratulate the EU and open forum Europe for their continuous commitment to such an important matter in this world. This open source policy summit is great and is global and is people driven. And that is what makes it very important. For us in the ITU, we connect the world. And as you will know with all these emerging technologies, the center of everything is open source. And therefore we do celebrate. We believe in sustainable digital transformation. We believe in universal, affordable, and meaningful connectivity for all the peoples in the world. The International Telecommunication Union, with its development bureau which I have the pleasure of leading, is focusing on accelerating the attainment or achievement of the 17 sustainable development goals. And we believe that open data, open source, open standards do drive technology. The potential of open source to transform peoples lives and accelerate sustainable development should not and cannot be overstated. And enabling open source software, data, content, standards and AI models means facilitating access to the building blocks of modern day society in the future. Making them available for use, modification and distribution is equivalent to empowering people with essential tools they need to survive and succeed in the 21st century. The reason why in intellectual property, there is a challenge in pretending software is because the source code comes from one person or one individual and other people build on. So to find novelty becomes a big challenge. Ladies and gentlemen, the potential of open source to transform peoples lives is immense. Open source ensures that we all work together as an international community to make sure that everybody, including those that are struggling to make a living, benefit from it. So like my colleague said earlier on, this is a symbol of democracy and that is very important. 30 years ago, the internet was built on open source software. It was a digital public good. Today, we recognize that 1.1 billion people from the world's 46 least developed countries pay 20 times more than us in Europe to have access to the internet. And a shocking 2.6 billion people remain offline. And that is not good. This is why the United Nations Secretary General launched the roadmap for digital cooperation which identifies digital public goods as instrumental to achieving the sustainable development goals and goals for global efforts to advance and support its creation. Think about this. And this is why it is important within the United Nations, interstate relations, diplomacy to make sure that we bring technology and digital right at the center. This global effort is being led also by the International Telecommunication Union because our membership is very diverse and we are very unique within the UN family. We have 193 member states, so at the poorest level, you know you are covered. We also have regulators in the telecom industry throughout the world from the FCC, which is the oldest regulatory authority, to the South Sudan, which is the youngest regulatory authority, they are our members. But industry too, and private sector, are an integral part of our membership. And the organizations that you represent that are not yet, including startups, small and medium enterprises that are not yet members of the ITU are welcome. Feel free to join us, academia. We have a plethora of academic institutions that are part of us. Together with these partners, we catalyze action on norms and standards around digital public goods. We conduct research and support stakeholders with the knowledge, tools and resources to digital public goods. Distinguished participants, one of the greatest challenges in operationalizing open source digital public goods is the lack of capacity, be it a technical, institutional or human to absorb, develop and leverage open source. And I will not hit our chest as ITU, but we are big on institutional arrangements and capacity building from individual persons to communities to countries to sub regions to regions and globally. Let me take the pleasure and honor of announcing here now that we have launched a joint open source ecosystem enabler project. And I would like to thank the European Commission and the United Nations Development Program for their great partnership in this extraordinary people impacting initiative. The open source ecosystem enabler project will accelerate the creation of digital public goods globally and help countries develop and strengthen their open source ecosystems by establishing open source program offices throughout the world and providing them with tailored training and technical support. These offices or OSPOS will become robust and reliable catalyzers for digitally enabled socio-economic growth. We aim to co-design this framework with the open source community and first deploy it as a pilot. Too many pilots end up in accidents. So we are going to accelerate making sure that this project is replicated across the globe. Again, I encourage you to be on the lookout for the open call. And we look forward to automating you into this massive people oriented project. I look forward to hearing from the experts represented here at the summit and those who may be speaking virtually and to learning from your success stories and challenges. Let this discussion be an opportunity for us to identify how to best operationalize open source digital public goods towards advancing society and putting all people on an equal footing. And I thank the time keeper because she threatened from the beginning that she would be very tough and she has been very generous with me and thank you very much again. Thank you. I was indeed generous and I will be very short now. I will invite all the panelists of our first panel of the day including Dr. Zawazawa. So please welcome on stage. We will discuss Europe in the world of open source. Nice to see you all. So it's my distinct pleasure to be moderating today's panel. And the first allow me to I want to start by introducing our panelists. So first we have with us, of course, Mr. Dr. Kosma Zawazawa, the director of the telecommunication development bureau at ITU, the International Telecom Union. We have with us Carla Montesi, the director for Green Deal Digital Agenda at the European Commission. We have with us Camilla Bruckner, who is the director of the UN-UNDP office in Brussels and representative of UN System in the EU. And we have with us Deborah Camparini, who is the chair of OSEA, Initiative Secure Identity Alliance and technical director of the Standardization Bureau and board of the Linux Foundation. So for a start, I spend my life in meetings convincing people why open source matters. So I'm here are things the first time where I don't have to do that. I think you all know. So I exhausted all my talking points. I had to yesterday think of something else. So I'm here to talk to you about SDGs, an important topic for us. It all started in 2015 where all our countries, all of us, got together in New York and designed something that is really transformative, that is at the core of everything we do called the 17 goals. And these goals are important for two things. They have their time bound. So they said we have 15 years to get them to make them happen. And we're now past the halfway part. And the second important thing when they define the SDGs is they said this is not for governments to deliver on. This are not for a private sector. This is for everybody. This is all us. And what we've been trying here is and they helped us by identifying that technology is the main mean of implementations. We would not be able to deliver on those 17 who goes from fighting, finishing hunger, making sure that everybody, the healthy education, the equalities, the environment, that for all of us to be able to work on that. And technology is the main mean. And here is that for us it's more important now open source is even more important for the delivery of SDGs. Why? Because of just the values of open source. They are the most aligned with the UN values. It's transparency. It's openness. It's collaboration. It's people who have never met each other who are working towards one same goal. So that's why we're now at the UN, I don't know if you know, we have six official languages, French, German, no, French, Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, Russian and English. And we think now of technology is the seventh language. Is that an open source is that seven language. Is what brings, is a get people to collaborate. And here I have my open source, my personal open source stories that we launch with the, as Mr. Bernardo mentioned, with the EU Digit, we launch the open source software for SDG, which is an initiative we call, we say, hey, world, please come help us fix and serve specific challenges on SDGs. So we started with the first SDG which is about education. And we said, please, can you help us improve Moodle? And then we have this incredible set of solutions that were delivered from everywhere in the world. And we had a jury who had to pick a winner. You would never guess who was the winner. We were all in shock. It was an inspector in the Ministry of Education in Côte d'Ivoire who built this incredible module in the height of COVID, allowing building virtual classes and allowing schools to take place virtually in Côte d'Ivoire. The CEO of Moodle who was in the event couldn't believe, and he promised that that module will be integrated in future distribution of Moodle. So it is everywhere and it really is allowing a lot of incredible effect that happened. So now how to go about that is really important is to make sure that capacity building, as Dr. Zava Zava mentioned, we have to build capacity in the world. It's not easy. And we know that personally, this is what I said, I spend my life convincing people. Building open source within the UN is tough because if you stop 100 people randomly at the UN, you'll have maybe 20% who will hate open source, who will tell you absolutely not. You'll have maybe 20% who will like it and there's a lot in between. So there's a lot of, we need to change the culture, we need to convince, we need to tell stories, we need to show examples. And we know how hard it is to do it internally at the UN. So it is also hard to do it at the government level. So we need to hold the hand, we need to support this government and make sure that they have what it takes to jump on that wagon. But also most importantly for us is really is also connecting these Ospo's. I can promise you the Ospo of Germany, I know they're building one. I can promise you they will have the same problem than the Ospo of Botswana or the Ospo of Morocco and the Ospo of the city of Paris. I can guarantee you they'll have the same problem than the Ospo of the city of Casablanca. So we need to stop the silos. We need to make sure that these, there are mechanisms where we can connect them. So these are some of the issues that we are looking at and I'm happy to work with everybody here. And just to finish, I think the two first speakers talked about it. I want to be the third one to talk about it, just in case you haven't heard it. Is that in July 9th and 10th, we will be organizing the second edition of the Ospo for Good conference. First one took place last year in New York. It was a big success. We were a smaller group. Now we're coming with much bigger ambition. We want to have four to five hundred people. And why? We don't want it to be yet another conference. There are tons of conferences about open sources. That one we really want to have a lot of developing world there. We want to have the voices that we don't hear usually an open source. We want to have a platform where we can actually engage with them. We want to be that place where we can share successes or stories and do a lot of advocacy, but also to build partnerships, to build networks. So please mark in your calendar. You can Google it. There's a website. It went up last night just for today. So you can Google it, Ospo for Good conference. And we're looking forward to having you all there. With this, let me now turn to the first question for my panelists, so Carla, how's Europe facing the challenge of supporting open source software update and growth, especially for public administration and services? And how's Europe aligned with international organizations such as UNDP and such as International Telecom Union? Many thanks and good morning everyone. Very happy to join you at this summit, an important moment of discussing this essential subject. Now, you're right to mention the European Union. For the European Union digital transformation, it's a key priority in our strategy with our partner countries, in our partnership with states around the world, eliminating the digital divide, supporting a human centric digital transformation. It's one of the key priority, one of the key priorities of our strategy that we call the global gateway. And to achieve this, we dedicate more than 10% of our overall European budget dedicated to our international partnership for the digital transformation. I mentioned this, it's employee, supporting skills, supporting capacity building, supporting digital connectivity, supporting providing services. And at the heart of all this, of course, there is the open source. Now allow me to reiterate one essential point that was already mentioned before, that of course, in order to achieve this digital transformation, when we talk about open sources, some important feature has to be there. And I just repeat the key words that is important for us also that this open source will be this open source software will be public, because this is what will allow innovation. It's interoperable, it's accessible, it's safe, and this includes the fact that it has to be inspected. We need to improve security for everyone, and only if these four key main features are there that we can really ensure that open sources will be a software that will benefit everyone. This is why we have a clear strategy at the European level for the open sources, and just allow me to give an example that we imply an application at the European Union Fest, that it's just last November, our colleges later have reached an agreement on EIDAS 2-0 regulation. In simple words, this allows Europe to have, to build the foundation for a digital identity wallet. This is just one example on which we really want to use this innovative approach that will rely on open sources. As it was said, as a clear digital public good. So this is important, and of course we start with Europe, but we would like to work also with our partners around the world on these elements. But you ask a second question, and here's how we are cooperating together with international organization, has UNDP and ITU, and of course, I mentioned Global Gateway, this strategy apply implementing this strategy, we work with many stakeholders, of course public administration, private sector, civil society, but also with an international organization. I can mention two, just two examples of this important partnership, because it's very long, it's very big, it's very important, but mentioning two examples, I refer to what the Secretary General already mentioned, in last March, we at the UN General Secretary Assembly, we have supported the joint SDG found digital window with a contribution of 30 million, this is an important contribution, it was just recognized by the Secretary General, and of course this is done in fully partnership with ITU and UNDP. Once again, as it was just mentioned, this found will allow promoting and localizing open source software, working on open data, work on the standards, and to ensure interoperability that will be key, the key success element to succeed. But the second example that I wanted to give, it's what we bring all of us here of course today, it's the launch of this new initiative, it was already recalled, it's the open source software for enabling public services innovation, this will be an important new initiative in fully partnership with ITU and UNDP. It was already mentioned what is important in this new initiative to build capacity building, because we know that the most compelling issue that we have is that governments around the world are facing with the open source technology is building capacity, and this will be the first objective of this new initiative that we are launching to get today. I stop here because I know that we will have a deeper presentation later, so I stop here for the moment. Thank you, thank you very much, very impressive all the work that you guys are doing at the EU, and congrats for the initiative that we are launching again today. Let me now turn to Debra. Hi, Dr. Kosma spoke earlier about the digital public good, the DPGs, and the importance for the life of everyone. So now tell us about OSEA, so the Open Secure Identity Alliance, and as an example of key open source technology for digital identities and their interoperability. So if you could tell us more about it, and why is it important to offer such a foundational building block for the open source community? Thank you. Have you ever lost your wallet? Well, imagine you take your backpack, you unzip it, you look for your wallet, you can't find it, you remove everything, you start panicking, and all of a sudden you have no ID, no identity documents, no passport, no ID cards, no driving license, nothing. So you can't do much, right? Like, I bet you can't check in your hotel tonight, you can't travel back home tomorrow, you can't access most of healthcare services. This today is a reality for 850 millions of people around the world. And to put it in perspective, the European citizens are 450 million, so that's quite a big problem, right? So these people are also known, also called invisible, so those are people that have no means to prove their identity, they have no birth certificate, no passport, no ID cards, nothing. They are mostly located in emerging economies, so you might tell me, well, what does it have to do with open source, and, you know, there are other priorities. But actually, when we think about it, we want to fight child trafficking, right? We want kids to go to school. We want people to access micro loans, or loans. So without identity, you can't do that. And this is why today's identity is part of the Sustainable Development Goals, so by 2030, we ought to actually give a legal identity to everybody in the planet. And government, to do that, they need to build digital public infrastructure, so complex infrastructure at national scale. And this is where OZIA Initiative came in, founded in 2019, so it's a collaboration between governments and private sector, so mostly companies specialized in cybersecurity or digital identity, to tackle this challenge together. It is, as I mentioned, the digital public infrastructure for managing identity is complex. We might not even realize it, right? When you hold your passport, be it in a physical or soon digital format, you can't, you don't imagine how much there's behind, how many infrastructure, how many technical components government need to set up, to deploy, to get to you as a citizen that identity in that passport. And like for every complex problem, what do you do? You break it down, and that's what we've done. We broke it down into smaller components. So as a community that we've built, we identified different building blocks, smaller building blocks that are needed for governments to set up identity infrastructures. And the second thing we've done is interoperability. So we have built some, I'm not getting into the technical talks here, I'm struggling a bit, but basically we're building some rails to connect all these different building blocks to make sure that the overall solution is interoperable via open standard. So this is important because there is something already existing in the governments in the country. So we don't want to toss away, right? We want to make sure that we leverage the legacy, we leverage the existing, we build on top, and that governments are not dependent, are not vendor locked, are not dependent on some companies and some products. So they are able to actually issue different smaller tenders where also some local companies can participate. So open standard was the first step of our journey. And now we've moved to open source as well. I think open standard and open source, they did very well. And so we are working, we are partnered with UNDP to develop an open source reference implementation of the open standard. So this is very much a journey in progress. On the open standard, we actually partner with ITU for the recognition of this standard as an international standard. So I'm conscious of time. There's so much I would like to say on the lesson learned that hopefully if you, you know, I'm happy to talk about this topic and much more. So if you have questions, you can reach out to me later because I don't think we will have more time in this panel. But thank you for the attention. Thanks so much, Deborah. It is a frightening thought to losing a wallet while you're traveling. That's scary. So yeah, thank you for all the work you're doing there. And let me turn to Camilla. The digital public services that based on open source technologies or as we know it as digital public goods can benefit not only developed countries or countries who are developing these tools but also countries who have from scratch or not having local capacity as of yet. So how does UNDP foster and support their sustainability and associated partnership across the world? So thank you very much. And thank you for the invitation to participate today and congratulations with the anniversary. So first of all, I want to underline how important it is to have a positive vision for digital. UNDP and ITU, we've done a shared research that pointed towards the digital can help us accelerate towards 70% of the SDGs. So the digital is very much an enabler and not I think an end in itself and we shouldn't also forget that. And indeed the open source digital public good communities play a huge role here. And UNDP is a proud co-lead of the digital public goods alliance. So we take a very active part in this community and development of expertise. And one example just to give you an example is the work we do within digital health where UNDP is currently implementing 60 digital health projects, many of them based on open source solutions. For example, one is called the district health information systems too for hospital management that currently is implemented in over 70 countries. And it supports equitable health outcomes. So we see the power that we can have when open source communities, private sector systems and funders and development agencies like the European Union come together. But there are of course also many risks as we are seeing a lot of these days, both in Europe where we see use of digital to metal in elections. The big risk here on very relevant now up to the European elections. And we have a lot of misinformation, access to social media and harming to the younger generations and their mental health. There was this senators or Senate hearing of the big tech companies the other day that was just about that. And also the e-waste and the power used for data centers which is huge. And of course this is mostly a first world problem. And then Nikala touched on it briefly as well. And so this cosmos, this huge inequity we have where we still have 2.6 billion people offline, I think you mentioned that cosmos. And the digital divide is a significant concern because it can marginalize communities even further than they are today. And individuals and leaving them behind as the digital economy takes a speed and accelerates even further. And it's also damaging to the gender divide. But more importantly, and this is one of the things I think that are really relevant today, is the governance and policy alignment where digital technology sometimes can outpace or often outpace development of governance frameworks. And this is where I think we have a real shared interest anecdotally just to take the example of the GDPR regulation. We've seen a lot of developing countries trying to adopt similar policies but they don't have the capacity to enforce it. And that of course undermines the trust and also the guidance to businesses is weakened. So it's critical to establish clear policies that align with the digital advancements and institutional capacity that Carla also talked about. Another issue is, as I said, trust and the perception that technologies can be used for surveillance or curtailing freedoms. So we need to support governments to use and ensure that there is transparency around how data is collected and used and shared and maintain the public confidence that this is done in a way that is in the broader public interest. And here, open source is a very important tool to do this. But there is a need for a concerted effort in the planning phase of digital to include wider stakeholder engagement. It cannot just be enforced. We really have to be inclusive in the consultations. And in the communications so that people understand what we are trying to do. On top of this comes cybersecurity where many developing nations often encounter difficulties to keep up with the rapid deployment of technologies. So that's another thing that we have to think about when we work together in helping our partner countries. And then finally, last point before I conclude is the maintenance where there's also limited resources for maintaining these systems that we set up. And this is classic to other things of our many 50, 30, or 30, 50 years of experience. We have in development efforts is that we put these systems in place, but we forget that they have to be maintained. And it's just as relevant for digital as it is and open source systems as it is for anything else. And here, back to Carla's point about skilled workforce that is lacking in public administrations, especially in low and middle income countries. And this is where UNDP and ITU are really trying to strengthen our corporation to invest in education and training programs and also build a talent pool that can secure a more sustainable pipeline of skilled professionals for the future. So yeah, all these questions of governance are really key to ensuring human-centered, a human rights-based approach. And this is where we see that the EU and UN can play a really a very important role together being very aligned on the ambitions of securing this type of model for digital development. And the initiative that we are launching today is a clear example of how we can achieve and come together and the potential of this corporation. So I want to thank the European Commission and Carla in particular for your support and the partnership. You're leading by example with the many regulations that you are putting into life. We get a lot of requests in countries about the DMA, the DSA, the recent digital act. How is it going to affect us? And how can we also be inspired? And here we must use this opportunity with this interest to get in there and support these governments and scale this support rapidly so that we manifest and create or secure that this model is the one that takes hold and not the model that is led by private sector nor the one that is led by more authoritarian regimes. So really this is a very important partnership that we need to nurture and develop. Thank you very much. Thank you very much Camilla. And I like the point where you said about building the capacity and training and working on the workforces. In public administration it's not in our DNA to work with the outside world. We just don't know how to do that. So this is new skills and new trainings that we have to give to these new countries and thank you for the initiatives. And also when I come back to the Digital Public Good Alliance so I'm very happy and proud that the two organizations are represented here today, the UN Office of ICT and the UN Technology Envoy are also proud member of the Alliance. So we're around 30 members so now so please check it out and see if your organizations also want to be part of the Alliance called DPGA, Digital Public Good Alliance. For my last question let me finish where we started with Dr. Zavazava. So how does ITU help build international capacity and mobilize resources in countries who are in need for help with open source technologies? Yeah thank you very much and it's a pleasure again to be on this panel. I want to thank my colleagues who have articulated most of the key points. I would summarize your question probably in three parts. One, we should answer the question why do we have 2.6 billion people in this time and era still being offline? One of the things is what Camila said, cybersecurity, confidence and security. We know that during the time of COVID many young women and girls were discouraged from being online because they were harassed and hurled during that period to the extent that some of it translated itself to offline harassment and that's not good. And we do prioritize cybersecurity is an important element that's one point. Second point is to do with affordability. Not everyone can afford the data. When you go to Africa, parts of Asia and the Pacific you realize what a challenge it is. Then the third component is the lack of digital skills and that's where capacity building comes in. But in addressing this challenge, ITU will not be able to do it alone or even UNDP, ITU or the UN in general. We cannot do it alone. We need to make sure that we have everyone on board. From the ITU standpoint I would like to address this issue and say we established what we call the ITU Academy which is a virtual platform but also from time to time we run a lot of courses face to face. And this saved us during the time of COVID because many thousands and thousands of people were able still to receive their education and to be equipped with digital skills. You see when we are doing projects and you go to the Pacific Islands and you meet an elderly woman with a grandchild who is about five years, four years, six years, teaching her how to use a smartphone. It's inspiring. And we know from our statistics that the ages of 14 to 24 and we term them in the UN language as youth, being the most active online. And that's why again we need cyber security to make sure that these children are safe. So child online protection is quite critical. So capacity building is very important for us. We also identified a segment of people who were not lucky like you and me to receive tertiary education. So we established what we call digital transformation training. And we run this throughout the world. Thousands and thousands of people are benefiting from this. Then we also have what we call academy training centers where we partner with Cisco, with the Norwegian Development Agency and we are doing wonders across the world. But all this needs resources, human resources, experts, but it also needs financial resources. And as I always say, money does not grow on trees. So we have to partner together and I want to recognize the European Commission for their generosity in supporting many, many of our program. Recently we signed a joint project on universal, measuring universal coverage. Making sure that we know when we talk about connectivity we are not talking about laptops, we are talking about people. So we must measure the meaningfulness of that connectivity. How can it translate in terms of disasters to saving lives? Dealing with the sea rise countries like to value Maldives that are sinking, etc. So electronic waste management space sustainability, etc, etc. And that is very important. So we have been very lucky in the Development Bureau of ITU that over the past nine months we raised about 23 million from partners to implement projects for the benefit of particularly those in the developing world so that they can play catch up. And also we launched and you can Google it what we call the partner to connect alliance. And this partner to connect alliance is an alliance of the willing, those who want to put digital at the sender. We're talking about losing your wallet but we also talk about financial inclusion. For women, 70% of the population in rural, least developed countries are women and children and they are struggling to go to the bank. They have to be on a bus for two hours, etc, etc. So we make it possible that way and we have managed to raise pledges of about 36.8 billion dollars to make sure that we bring success and out of that about 17 pledges valued at about 200 million relate to open source projects. So we think it is very important to link financial resources, human resources to the development agenda so that people can participate effectively without looking from outside through the window and seeing what is happening inside without them having access. Thank you very much. Thank you Dr. Kosma. Very impressive indeed all the work that ITU is doing and I've been working in partnership with ITU for the last 10 years and I've always been amazed about your capacity to reinvent and rebuild. Unfortunately, I think the timekeeper is not generous with me as he was with Dr. Zawazawa. I've been receiving nasty looks. I started with looks that I ignored and they moved my glasses and I hear that now there will be somebody coming and taking the microphone physically. So with this I just want to thank our speakers. It was very interesting to talk to you. Thank you everybody and we're happy to connect and catch up later. Thank you. Thank you moderator. Thank you the Open Forum Europe. Excellencies, esteemed panelists, distinguished participants. I'm David Mansett. I'm the project coordinator of the new initiative that's been recently announced and I would like today to gather with my colleague Benjamin Bertelsen from UNDP to officially unveil the project visual identity during this very nice summit with the hands at the bottom and the cube at the top. This symbolizes mutual cooperation. We are very excited to meet together building our digital capacity thanks to Open Source. As an international collaboration, OC this new project receives funding from the European Commission under the global gateway program for a 42 month global action plan to be carried out by the Open Source Management Program to support countries in their digital public services development, providing them with best of breath education, training and support, thanks to the deployment of concrete Open Source program offices in target countries, in other words hospitals for good. Ben, you want to say a few words? Thank you David. We are excited about this partnership from and you can take it down. It's fruitful partnership between our two UN organizations the UNDP and the ITU and our complementary strengths in this work generously supported by the European Commission. We urge all to follow along. We'll be talking together with partners who can be hosts for OSPOS for good and to developing countries. This is the first and reason memory of projects working with OSPOS for public services in two developing countries. Thank you Ben. I would like to thank our directors for having taken this nice photo session with the new project visual identity just for the symbolic the cube that they were holding is an Open Source plant pot that we've produced that we've released that you can print at any scale it's recyclable symbolizes growth and capacity. Thank you very much.