 Thank you very much. It's a great pleasure to be here and thank you very much to the previous speaker who referred to Mpese quite extensively. I think I'll start by just reminding everyone while it's very important this event and also thanking Doreen for phrasing it correctly. The STGs is basically our vision, our common vision, its most ambitious vision that we've ever formulated around human progress. And it begins with one pivotal objective, which is eradicating poverty. However, as we heard during these few minutes, we are clearly off track. Today almost 10% of the world population live in extreme poverty. We have slipped back with an additional 70 million living in extreme poverty since 2019, an additional. And we've just seven years to reverse this trend. So this comes as an opportune moment. I also think the moderator referred rightly that this panel is about hope. It's about figuring out how do we collectively try to turn this around. And I'm here to share with you that I believe it's entirely within our powers, if we put our mind to it, to create the right conditions for everyone to flourish, even the poorest and most marginalized in society. At the core of it, we have one lever and that's democratizing technology. Vodafone has worked, obviously, across the globe for many, many years and we have seen firsthand how democratizing technology can improve people's lives and livelihoods. In order to illustrate the point and to bring you on a journey, let me move back to 2007. 2007 was the midpoint of the so-called Millennium Development Goals. It was also the year that iPhone launched what is now considered to be a very small phone. I don't know if you heard about it. It became quite successful. But it was also the year that Vodafone together with the UK government started thinking around how could we evolve and how could we launch a new innovative service to tackle the many unbanked that existed in Kenya. And with the help of the UK government, we launched something called M-Pesa. M for mobile. Pesa is basically Swahili for cash. This was a very novel and innovative concept where we thought about how do you convert fiscal cash into electronic transmissions? It allowed people using a simple device like a 2G phone, relying on a simple network, which is a 2G network, to make electronic payments. Today, something that all of us take for granted, but at the time, something that was very innovative. Of course, there was a huge demand for this and a huge interest. In the first month, we had 20,000 customers on this new service. Now, fast forward. Today, 2023, we're midpoint of the SDGs. M-Pesa today has become a resounding success. We have 56 million customers. We have half a million M-Pesa agents in seven countries. It has evolved into the largest and most advanced FinTech platform in Africa. And I'm very pleased to say that actually it carries 26 billion transactions annually. That's two and a half times AMEX or American Express as we know it. Today, M-Pesa is also an integral part on how you build platforms in Africa. Be it around agricultural loans or be it around how do you pay as you go usage of solar power for homes. So it has become transformation and integrated in every people, everyone's lives. I don't want to spend too much time going through all the benefits of M-Pesa. I thought it would be much better if we asked Juliana, one of our agents for M-Pesa in Tanzania to tell you about how M-Pesa has transformed her life. M-Pesa is a forge-making project in many countries. M-Pesa is the only company that is not ours. It's the only company which has supported us. M-Pesa has been a great initiative. I work with Fida, they represent the nation. When I first came to visit M-Pesa I found out I'm very grateful. I have a house, I work with friends, and they also provide for us to live in M-Pesa. The health and well-being of the people and the people of the world. Juliana's message, thank you. Juliana's message to all of us is a message of hope. And of course, she's part of those that have been able to transform her life by living in a digitally enabled world. Unfortunately, as Doreen and others refer to, there's still 2.6 billion people that are not as fortunate as Juliana, that they still live in an offline world. But I want to make this very concrete, because in corporate world, you have to be super concrete. 2.6 billion basically means that we have to connect one additional million every day, single day from today until 2030. That's one million people we have to connect. That requires an enormous mobilization of effort by all of us. So let me call out three actions that we at Vodafone believe are absolutely essential that we can all rally behind. First, we need a significant investment strategy and mobilization of funding for connectivity, particularly in the least developed countries. Second, we need smartphone frauds. This cannot continue to be something that is available for the rich or for those that are more fortunate to be born into a higher income. Third, we need to make sure that we build applications and platforms that are specifically targeted at the needs of those that struggle in society, those that are vulnerable and marginalized groups, like MPS has been for financial inclusion, or like which the doctor referred to, how you build agricultural platforms, how you build healthcare platforms, how you build educational platforms, which we will hear more about at the panel. At the end of the day, the clock is ticking, one million per day every day from now to 2030. But I'm convinced if we mobilize behind this objective, we can do it, and we can truly democratize technology to the benefit of everyone. Thank you.