 Nuri, what can you tell us about the growing dystopian reality in Xinjiang? Imagine that you just wanted to go about with your daily routine. You get up in the morning, try to go to work, try to go to school, take your children to daycare. You have to pass through security checkpoints. You are forced to surrender your phone for data scan. You are allowing the officials to do iris scans, in some instance, biometric data collection. And while all this is happening, you see non-weager individuals waving hands or not showing any sympathy for you to go through a different method to allow yourself to be subjected to this kind of surveillance illegal search. So that's kind of the daily routine for the Uyghurs. And this is so invasive and pervasive around the region. Some policy experts liken it to an unopened prison. Oftentimes we focus rightly so on the people who have been detained in the camps, but the life of the Uyghurs who are outside of the camps are probably even worse to the extent because it's happening every day to them.