 The documentary tells us, first and foremost, the moral and ethical issues of the subject. And it focuses more in depth about the lives of the people that actually go through either kidney failure or feel the need to sell one of their kidneys due to poverty and trying to raise their family out of poverty. If you're on the waiting list for a donor kidney, it means in the Netherlands that you have to wait for about four years. And for many of the people who are on the waiting list, the kidney is too late. There are about 150 people per year on the waiting list who are suffering. And yes, if your life depends on it, then you look for all possible solutions. And one of them is that you travel to countries where kidneys are too expensive and where transplantation centers are, where you can get the kidney transplanted. While actually the solution is very close. We all have two kidneys, but it is very possible to live with one kidney. There is even recent Swedish research showing that the life expectancy is not lower after people have donated a kidney. And that is of course very good news. Because for the Netherlands it would mean that if only one in 40,000 Dutch people are ready to get rid of a kidney, the waiting list will disappear. I myself donated the kidney two years ago. People also say altruistic kidney donation. I don't like those words. I'd rather donate anonymously. Because I don't think altruistic donation is so altruistic. It is a means of helping people. The opposite can be very good. Because the risk of donating is very low. There are risks, we have to be honest with you. But due to the enormous progress of medical science, the operation techniques are terrible. It can even be done with a care operation. So you have few operation wounds, less pain, less side effects and so on. And it is now also scientific research that people who are well aware of a strict cure are able to donate after the operation and stay healthy as before the operation. So the risks are very limited and well calculated. And the profit of this treatment is enormous. Because you just save people's lives. More and more is happening. Even in the Netherlands, there is an international event. For as far as I know, there have been about 150 anonymous kidney donations in the Netherlands. And there are actually three elements that are important to those kidney donations. The first is that it is a donation of a living donor. The second is that it is unpaid. Because we don't want the organ surgery to take place. And the third is that it is anonymous. This event, because it's a serious issue and it affects a lot of people. But since there is not much coverage, people don't know about the issues regarding it. And I think starting with the young people, people from university, people that are already educated and understand things at a deeper level and understand how everything is interconnected. For them to know about the issues regarding the organ trade and the organ donation list, I think that's important. And that can really make a change for the future. In March, a website was launched. It was put on the website by the Erasmus Medical Centre. And the website is www.nierdonation.info. It contains information for people who donate anonymously. And that's a very important step. As far as the government has a task here, it's a political issue. I suspect that the current cabinet wants to be very conservative and thinks that people have to know that. And of course that's the case. But it is important that people who donate anonymously to donate a kidney to live, can ask questions somewhere. And this website ensures that those questions are answered and that you can take the first step on that path. We can quickly solve the problem in our country. In a hurry, imagine that one in 40,000 people in our country takes the decision to donate anonymously. Then we can definitely solve this problem in our country.