 Then two weeks ago, Sulawesi had their earthquake, unlike Lombok's earthquake, the government of Indonesia said that they would accept international aid, and so of course many, many international NGOs go there and they've changed the mind, and this is the Indonesian way it happens. They've changed the mind and everybody was sent away, and we don't really know what's happening there. No one will help you. You must save your family yourselves. It's a really good point. The government's not going to help them. They'll save it for you, really, because of the beast that's on Gotong Royale and his work together. And then, so it's very easy to clear our old house with tall, big hammers, got cutters. That's what they haven't got, big hammers. They're not used to even swinging them. They're used to swinging farm things. You'll see them swinging a hammer at first, and they're all like, it happens very naturally. Letters may be compute, grain is coming, all will be mowed, dysentery disease, malaria, big problems, and tin camps. Eight hammers, only 50,000, you know, so they're saying to aid, I can see how cheap it is, so they can order it, or they can get hold of us, and we can get tools to them. And bolt cutters. And then that just shows the rain here. When we came here, we saw them in tin camps, and then the government would go in those toilets, and I just said to them, hey, just up here, there's a school with five toilets. We've had guys who work at night when we gave them the tools under life. They got the tools, and at six in the morning, they cleared the tools. Five in the morning, they cleared the tools. The ladies were lining up through five or ten in the morning, just for three decent toilets. The other ones aren't these, these are concrete patterns on the end stage, because apart from some of the places where the soil is bad, you'll find that all the toilets have the tanks already there at that time. So break down the old house, and recover the house pad and toilet. The toilet is the only work to get that break down of homes and dangerous structures and high walls. Be careful, clear dangers, every is used. Strokes to pull down ropes are really important for them down. Recycle free materials. We went to government meetings, and after the meeting with our interpreters and all that, and not us, we were, we had very big people going in with us. They still didn't understand that these houses are free. There is nothing needed that they need, you know. So the big point in the here is it's all free. So these, these windows and everything are topped out. The recoverables are huge, you know. Save all the old materials. Recover squads at 70 percent, get that 90 percent wood, 80 percent roofing, 900 percent bricks. 50 percent if they want them. Windows and doors, 70, steel, 80, beds, and nails and wire and spokes. It's all 60 percent, so just stuck in with the fix. The white brick I showed you. When this earthquake all started, it was delivering aid. So food, water, we did for weeks. And it always felt like it was never enough. See what we could do with aid money, which is so true. We built their homes for free. When they finished building the villages with their tools, they seed them onto the next village and they teach them how to do that as well. So it's working out pretty good, we're excited. People don't understand what should they do with all these tools. But when we worked with Longbo Hiras Team and we introduced this to Rumpa area in Ganga, in Kayangan, then people understood how to do with these old tools. And now we already built so many temporary houses and we already returned refugees from their tents to their own house. Maybe now remain only 73,000 refugees from 400...