 It is the biggest mood in the country, not only in international law, but generally. I don't think there is any other mood which has brought as many as 60 teams participating in this business. Even if people hear that he did not, he said that it is a fact. Specifically, the problem expects you to argue in the context of the ICC Statute. However, in oral argumentation that is sometimes insufficient. So what a lot of judges, especially in the semifinal and final round, they expect you to know the broad contours of international law and I think linking that back to the statute and the facts at hand, it was something that there was a unique skill that we'd managed to learn by the finals I think. So there were certain parts of the problem that we found hard and some things are hard from the prosecution, some things were hard from the defense side. So I think the mood itself was a question of balancing the issues themselves and playing to your strengths finally. So for instance, the charge on conscripting children for instance was something that is extremely prosecution heavy and the charge on destruction of cultural property was something extremely defense heavy. So it's about prioritizing arguments and making sure that your strengths are something that you communicate well to your judges and you show your knowledge of the area of law itself to them and make it evident that you do in fact know even in spots where you are in fact in a difficult position, so to say. Given in today's time when IHL is usually neglected and not given due importance, however, there are so many great breaches of justice and so many serious crimes being committed in the world. So I think that it is important that we don't turn a blind eye towards IHL and give it a due regard, it really needs. Being it's one of those big league moods for competition so there's a lot of research that goes into a lot of preparations. I think it's a good incentive for any team that comes up and participates here not only for the prestige that this competition holds but also the subject area that they deal with. I'm practicing in court also, in the Esildari court, but I come here every year for this court practices because I am interested about international law and we want that everybody should know about international law. I'm mooting for the first time so this is really interesting for us and regarding preparations we were really fortunate because they have been past seniors who had attempted this or we got some really good mentorship even though there were some constraints of time but at least we're here now, we got to submit our memorials. A lot of people don't even realize it is something apart from human rights laws that deals with just specific war crimes or something related to humanitarian aid. So I think this is the time that you need to have awareness and the fact that law students themselves do not really know that there's a separate area of law dealing with this I think that's something to be taught about.