 Besides the official talks, I had the opportunity to go to rural Damascus, which is actually still Damascus City is a city environment, a highly populated environment. We see a lot of people injured. We see health points and hospitals with insufficient medicine, with little staff to attend a lot of patients. You see a lot of shelling having gone on, apartment buildings destroyed or burned. You see children which are under shock still from the violence going on. All consequences of an armed conflict unfold in front of you. The meeting with President Assad was very factual and to the point and was focused on humanitarian issues. He appreciates the work ICRC is doing. He appreciates the work and cooperation we have with the Syrian Arab Red Crescent. And he was asking on what he could contribute to make our work more important and to scale it up. So I mentioned the obstacles at the present moment to the work of ICRC. The problem of bringing medicine and medical equipment into the country, to distribute it all over the country and to those places which are most in need. And we discussed issues of visiting prisons and of the protection of the Syrian populations, of internally displaced people. What I hope will happen now, I left Syria and the meeting with President Assad with several commitments to improve on medical delivery, on access of the ICRC, on increasing the scope of our operations. And I hope that first signs and positive signs of these commitments will materialize in the next few days. And I hope that within the next few weeks we can see improvement.