 Nowadays, it's normal to think that the plague no longer exists. But in countries like Congo Kinshasa and Madagascar, people die from this highly contagious disease every year. In Madagascar, people are still becoming infected and the chance of a major outbreak has not gone away. Prisoners, often in overcrowded and unhygienic prisons, share their quarters with hundreds of rats and disease-carrying fleas. Today, the plague in Madagascar is hundreds of cases, each year, of pulmonary plague, which many die, of bubonic plague, some survive. And so it's always a problem to control this disease. If the plague enters prisons, it will be an atomic explosion of the plague in the city and never the walls of prisons will stop the plague from coming out and killing the rest of the city. We pulverize all the chambers to hunt the poisons, the coffins, the poons, all the little beasts that are on the ground floor, that are in the walls, and we try to do that every six months. And it's the detonators who do it themselves, and we try to form them. And the objective is that in the future they can spread this activity, that the Penitentiary Administration can do it outside of the CICR assistance. The hygiene problem, I could say, compared to the last two years, we see that there is an improvement. But the big problem that remains, for example, for this establishment is particularly for the district D. A district here with 1,100 inmates is the water problem. If we don't have water, we don't have hygiene. We have a shower for about 100 people. We also have a toilet for 80 people. But in the middle, there are prisons or courtyards that are less equipped here. We are preparing the box, called Cartman box, intended for the disinfection of rats. We do that often because in terms of fighting against the plague, we first have to kill the mice before killing rats. This is the basis of the technique, of the disinfection, and of the disinfection, it goes at the same time. Here again, it's a rat circulation because there are rats in the box. So it's also a passage for the rat. At the same time, for humanitarian reasons, because it's a population that can't defend themselves, it has to be protected, but also for the rest of the society, it's important to the demand of the prison's medical staff that the inspector and the Red Cross invest in this problem and try to fight against these rats in prisons. So the rat is gone. It is impregnated with the insecticide that will kill the mice in the rat. At the same time, the rats will come back in their hole and the insecticide will kill the larvae of the mice. I am very happy to be here, to cooperate with you, to protect the rat. I am very happy to be here. I am very happy to be here. I am very happy to be here. I am happy to be here because I have a dirty, dirty mouth, to be a good man. I love Tampkele, it's my favorite, it's my favorite, There's a lot of work to be done. We're very busy with the work. We're very busy with the work. We're very busy with the work. We're very busy with the work. We're very busy with the work. We've been picking up the traps this morning and it has been very well carried out. We've had a lot of work. Here's an example. Next, we're going to pick up the traps on the rats and see if these traps are prey for pests. And for the dissecting part, we'll also see if there are pests in the rats' organs. Although the spread of plague from rats via fleas to people has been prevented in prisons, the same can't be said for the rest of the country. In rural areas, there's little understanding of the plague. Often it is something to be ashamed of and covered up. As a result, not all cases are reported to the authorities by this vulnerable population spread out across a vast territory. In Campaine, in the plague zone, the knowledge of people on the plague is very limited due to lack of awareness. We don't know the clinical signs, the manifestations, the measures to take to control the disease. So there are delays in the Prygencharstika because they don't go to the sanitary centers very late. If there's a plague in the area, it's because there's a lot of people. If there's a lot of people, it's because there's a lot of people. Even if there's a lot of people, it's because there's a lot of people taking care of the plague. It's because the population is very small and it's very small. Raphred's daughter, Mau Li, is buried on a hill close to the town center where she died two years ago. The grave is located 30 kilometers away from her village. Raphred won't be able to retrieve his daughter's body until 2017 after observing a seven-year period imposed by the health authority. The father of the son of the district chief himself was not only touched, but he took the plague and it was a plague. I was really shocked because we have always believed that these are the poor people in the campaigns because we also explain all the time that these are the farmers who bring the plague. But it is the son of the district chief himself, so I was really shocked, that's true. I think that the disease of the plague is due to a problem of ignorance and its propagation too. The essentials are to be sensibilised and explained to the people that the disease of the plague can be avoided, the disease of the plague can be cured, but in a hospitalised centre. Without steps to monitor and check the spread of the disease, the plague is a danger to public health that can quickly get out of hand. But the government has adopted a national strategy to fight the disease. They now keep national statistics for every case of the plague recorded in Madagascar, which is then passed on to the World Health Organisation. And with ICRC support, the prevention campaign in prison goes on. The challenge for this campaign is not to stop in the capital and in this prison, but to be able to develop this prevention on the whole of the Malagascar territory and to inscribe the whole of the penitentiary system in this prevention campaign that leads to authorities.