 Sexual violence happens everywhere in all the conflicts in the world or in other situations of violence. It is really something that is widespread and that we see happening in times of peace and therefore even more in times of conflict. For humanitarian workers, it is also an invisible phenomenon because the victims will not come forward and talk to you like other victims would do. Therefore, you really have to provide services that the victims will trust where they will access and come and feel safe to tell their stories without having consequences for them. I can give you an example, a very recent example from the Central African Republic where we had a number of victims that went to a hospital where ICRC staff was working and we referred them to a health center to be tested for sexually transmitted diseases. These women actually didn't go because they were not pregnant, they didn't have small children and therefore by going there they would have been seen as victims of sexual violence. They were seriously ill and had some symptoms of women being in such a state of health. These women came to the hospital with a tiny pump and spent $3 a month. When my husband came in, he said he was sick and know how to take care of his children. My husband was sick that day because I had to go to the hospital but we didn't go because he was sick. They say it's the women's business, because it's the women themselves who get raped. That's why we're going to continue as volunteers to make our sensitization so that one day, the whole community can be aware and know what the rape is. And the woman can have one day her place as a woman. So the way that we can actually reverse this invisibility is by assuming that by default there is sexual violence in armed conflict and other situations of violence, and therefore design responses that the victims can get access to so that we create an entry point for them. Even if we don't know how many cases and what are the patterns and trends, we know that there is sexual violence and therefore we need to provide responses that are appropriate.