 In South African President Cyril Ramaphosa says the agreement from European countries at the G7 summit to enter text-based negotiations in the WTO on the waiver of COVID-19 vaccine intellectual property rights was a move in the right direction. India and South Africa, both guests at the G7 summit, are leading the proposal to waive intellectual property rights for COVID-19 vaccines at the World Trade Organization. Ramaphosa also addressed the expansion of the global leaders' emergency reserves by $650 billion, which G7 leaders said they welcomed, also backing a global target of providing $100 billion to the most vulnerable countries. We believe that there is a need for solidarity to be pledged, that your G7 countries and indeed the G20 countries need to pledge solidarity with those that have been more negatively affected by the pandemic. What we have been able to get from, say, the European countries is their agreement that the World Trade Organization process must ensue, and there must be negotiations that are based on the text. And we'd like to believe that having encountered negativity and opposition right at the beginning, the position has softened, it has become much more reasonable, and for them to have agreed that we should now have text-based negotiations, it represents a move which we would like to acknowledge, and when we do get to text-based negotiations, we believe that we can make headway.