 My name is Priseta Hendricks. I'm the treasurer for the Uyba Centre for Fontaine Conservancy in the northwest Kunene region of Namibia and I'm as well the chairperson for the Southern Kunene Conservancies Association. I don't know if it's a little obvious, but I would like to say that communities living with this wildlife carry the greatest cost of living with this wildlife and I personally have you could say I grew up with elephants as pets sort of because we've had maybe it's about 20 metres away from where our home was where elephants would come and come drink water. So I just think in the sense of if we want to have a say in sort of wildlife conservation and that kind of thing then the people that have communities are the people that have cared for this wildlife before the world cared for it. So their voices should definitely be heard in conversations, bigger conversations regarding this wildlife. There was a question earlier that was being asked about what are some of the interventions that have to do with people that are not actually living with this wildlife and fortunately in the context of Africa, specifically Namibia, their rural community is actually versus urban community is about 50-50%. So that means a lot of people are already aware of this stuff, but it's for the people that are not in day to day contact with this wildlife. So it's important that for them to give their sort of their share they need to understand how they can do it because they can't if they don't have if they just sort of sit with their books and their sort of perspectives then they don't actually know in the context in which communities living with this wildlife how they understand it and so forth. So it's important for communities themselves to present themselves accurately in that regard. Again in the context of Namibia and specifically the CBNR program, the communal conservancies, conservancies have sort of zoonation plans meaning that in their conservancy the area they've identified this area is for tourism, this area is for wildlife, this area is for farming and that kind of thing. So I think the best that we can do especially for wildlife and in the concept of conservancies free roaming wildlife is that we respect sort of the boundaries that we set in these areas. If we have designated an area for exclusive wildlife use that's what it's used for and people outside coming into communal areas should also respect that as well as the members because that is sort of the only way that you're going to reduce sort of land use conflict in terms of you know more of conflicts that's going to arise because there's more and more contact with humans and wildlife.