 Thank you Jean-Michel. Thank you, thank you for Mr. Théry, for your invitation. The French Development Agency strategy is very simple. We can summarize that in two words. We said, all Africa. That is many things. That means that we are going to make the maximum of what we can do in Africa, which is about 50% of our capacity. We have about 500 staff who are present in all countries. This means that we have to stop, to cut Africa into two parts that is North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa. Before coming here, I was looking for the most figures about the GDP of Africa, and then I was looking at the documents of the International Monetary Fund, and there we find MENA and Sub-Saharan Africa, and we cannot actually they do not add up with a simple calculation. On the other hand, we still have our own institutions. We still have our development agencies and diplomacies and international institutions, except the African institutions such as the African Development Bank and the African Union. We still have this division between the two parts of Africa. This is something that should be overcome, and we should look at Africa as a whole, as an emerging continent. I have looked at these figures, and the figures that relate to Africa. This is more than 250 billion billions of GDP and more than 2 billion inhabitants, and these are figures that apply to India. We have said that Africa is Switzerland and nowhere we can say that Africa is India. Let me interrupt you. During 15 years, the African GDP has actually increased from the level of the GDP of Belgium to that of France. This could be Africa, this could be India, or the United Kingdom. Who was actually doubted in the emergence of India and its ranking in the world and global economy? If we consider the whole map of Africa, we can see that there are sub-regions, and we can see also the movement of different populations who are not moving from south to the north, but they move from the north also to the south. We can also see the different strategies and the investments of the main actors, and we have heard the message of the King who talked only about Africa, and I think that we have to change our lenses in order to be able to go hand in hand with the very important Moroccan actors. I was yesterday with Mazin, with the CDG, and with you, Mr. and your movement in Africa is very strong, and we are going to try to adopt that and to implement it. What is more interesting for us is this very situation, that is the role of Morocco in the regional integration and the resumption of this role, and in the coming month Morocco will adhere to the CDAO and the ECOS actually, and we can also see that the map of the continent will be changed, and we have talked about demography. This is something which is very patient for me. We have about 100 million Africans by the beginning of the 20th century, now we have 1 billion and 200 million Africans, and this is something which be continuing with the speed, with the increase of the genes and employment and activity and growth, and of course this is something which is encouraging us all, and this is the innovative potential that we can notice. We all travel all around Africa. Whenever I travel to Africa, I come back with an idea, with an innovation. There is an example I was with the minister of national education. My education is at the heart of the development of France, and we were talking about education and he told me that the professors in Senegal, they are inspected using the tablets, and therefore we can have a camera and we can see what is happening in the class, and then we give a grade. And what if we do that in France? Well, I want to say that whenever I move to Africa, I can find some examples that are very pertinent and very precious. What is disturbing me and the present situation, you have talked about this dual crisis in Africa. We have the Sahel crisis and we have the Central African crisis. These are for me linked because the international community should question this matter. We have a macroeconomic crisis. We have about 50% of the fiscal income that vanishes, and I think that the international community is getting mobilized. I am also disturbed by the fact of the existence of the security crisis that is impacting on the Sahel, something that we do not integrate in our equation. And this is also one of the consequences of dividing Africa into two. I think that we have forgotten the Sahel for many decades, and it is still there in the international institutions. And we have not injected enough means and tools in and support for the Sub-Saharan Africa. I think that we need a sort of alliance for the Sahel, and we need to involve all the partners and all the stakeholders. And I think that we have to change things. The last point that is very disturbing for me is that we do not move very quickly towards what we call the non-Sovereign Funding. When we say that this funding is not sovereign, this means that we have a frame of reference, which is the sovereign funding. That is, we have to fund the government. Well, we can overcome the challenges of Africa if we move towards other entities that are able to invest and to take loans. And this is the private sector, the local governments, and also the NGOs. And we are not moving very quickly for this purpose. And our public instruments and the multilateral conventions and agreements are not yet oriented towards this type of movement. Therefore, we have a sort of paradoxical situation in Africa. We have the public debt which emerges in difficult areas and that would represent in the private sector about one-third of the GDP. I would like to say in the end that we are changing things. We are increasing our investments and we are activating that with regards to the support and the aid that we give. This is done by the Germans. This is through the European Investment Fund that will be presented in Abidjan in the Europe and African Summit. And we are doing that with all the new actors from the South and with all the sovereign development banks. And this is done with our colleagues in JICA and in the IDFC, International Development Finance Club, of whom I am the president, which is made up of local and international banks, Chinese, Indonesian, South Africans, Brazilians, and so forth. These are the means and tools that will be able to mobilize the private sector and to react to the challenges that we are facing. Thank you very much indeed.