 We are here for a very important exercise called GUMBO. Emergency Action Team volunteers. We specialize trained emergency response teams, which are mainly tasked to save lives during emergencies. Today this scenario is a practical exercise for them to show how to respond during emergencies. The very common emergencies that we encounter in South Sudan in general is very practical to this exercise we did today, like the communal fight. As a result of this you can see people are injured at the outcome of the fighting and we have to respond like if somebody is stabbed or shot with a gun or if he is also wounded with any of the local weapons, with fractures, with bleeding, with wounds. All these different cases the volunteers are provided with the skills and how to manage. What we have seen in the country in December is a typical example that the country was in fights and a number of people were injured on the streets. So the Emergency Action Team are the ones in most cases responding to the situations of violence. We are neutral, we don't have anything to do with politics. We are much concerned about the human life. We are here to save lives during emergencies and this is I think very important that people have to understand. I think it's very important during this time to disseminate about the mandate of the Red Cross movement in general so that we are allowed access during crisis. I really find joy when you're offering support to somebody who is more vulnerable and you feel like you're risking life and saving life. That is a big reward to us in the international society. Red Cross society without the volunteers is like a factory without machines. Volunteers are the assets and they are the human resource that normally carried activities of national society. So without the volunteers there's nothing called the movement real, the Red Cross movement.