 My message to the family on behalf of the ICRC is one of deep condolences. We share their grief and sorrow and shock of what has happened. Delegate, their family member worked for the ICRC for humanitarian objectives only and they go through difficult days and we will give them all support they need to come through this as best as possible. ICRC has temporarily suspended this operation and movements in Libya. We need time to review the situation security-wise to care for the team, to support the family and to take the immediate measures after a crisis like this. But we have suspended temporarily and we are not pulling out of Libya and we will continue to support the victims of violence and conflict in Libya in the future. It's a shocking attack. We are there for no other reason than supporting the victims who need us there. We work with the Libyan Red Crescent. We work with a strong team on the ground and a direct attack on us, on one of our staff is first and foremost shocking, it's illegal, it's against international law but it's also devastating in terms of possible consequences for the victims and the beneficiaries. We strongly condemn this and we will have to think thoroughly on what comes next now. There are a number of things we don't know at all. We don't know who was behind the attack. Nobody has claimed it. We can have speculation but we don't know. Secondly, we don't know if this was targeted at ICRC as an institution. The fact is that one of our staff members being part of a team was directly attacked and killed and that's what we have and then we need to work further to find what conclusions can be drawn on that but we cannot at this stage say that it was an attack on ICRC as an institution. When we have a security situation like this with this shocking event taking place there are certain things which need to come in the right order. We care now about the family who lost someone. We care about the other colleagues who were there part of that shocking incident. We have a team on the ground which needs support and we need time to analyse. Then the different decisions are coming but ICRC has no intention to leave the victims of Libya behind. We continue to work for the victims in Libya but the way we're going to do it and in what form that needs to be sorted out as we've had the time to review and analyse this. The first priority now is to support the people directly involved.