 IOM has set up a task force specifically to look at all the different aspects in relation to responding to COVID-19 and the coronavirus elements that are hitting everyone, including UN agencies in regards to our operations, but also in regards to duty of care. We are in a pandemic that has raised a whole range of issues that some people, including Professor Ian Golden, who we've worked with at Oxford, has been talking about for quite some time now, but those kind of predictions, those insights and that analysis hasn't really been taken on by states and by other communities of interest, so we are now in a very strong reactionary kind of phase, trying to look at knowledge and information and the latest statistics and coming up with operational responses really quickly. IOM's focus is first and foremost on our member states and on our beneficiaries, as well as staff welfare around the world. Our Director-General is very keenly focused on working with a range of different partners to support migrants who might be in displaced person camps around the world and haven't got that ability to engage in social isolation, for example. We're working with states to facilitate responses in regards to migration health, in regards to operations and trying, everything that we can do to keep operations going. At the moment, we're also facing issues around containment, around trying to minimise the risks for all people in the communities, and we would always argue quite strongly that that includes migrants. Let's not just look at those who are citizens of a country, but include everybody in the community.