 I'm coming back from Situe, but more importantly, our team has just come back from a string of three townships to the east of Situe, which were the township, some of the most severely affected by the recent troubles of October, where they've seen as divided communities, they've seen civilians that have been cut off from the rest of the world and from access to essential services. Our people have been involved in the evacuation of close to 300 patients to referral hospital. I mean, just imagine, for instance, a lady needing a C-section at a hospital. The problem is the lady hailing from a neighborhood, which is separated from the hospital, where she's to have her C-section, by a string of villages where she doesn't feel safe, where basically she could not hope to cross where she alone. So what it means, it means letting this lady, having this lady access this medical care. That's what it means in tangible terms. The name of the game for us, together, of course, with our partners at the Myanmar Red Cross Society, is to re-institute, to re-establish access to essential services and especially access to medical care. And the second thing is, of course, to help improve the water and sanitation situation. In a context where it's difficult, where acceptance is an issue, and an issue that can basically effectively prevent you from working, so far, ICRC has managed to enjoy the acceptance from a broad spectrum of the communities, and that has enabled it to work. That has enabled it to work without escorts, to work according to its criteria.