 Our thoughts go really to the family of Abdel Bashar. He had been working for ten years with the ICRC. His father to eight children and he's dead. He was unarmed, he was defenseless. He was protecting a compound from where I can tell you hundreds of thousands of Afghans were getting valuable services. And there is no more and we are very sad for it. Yesterday, in the afternoon, four men, two wearing suicide vests, attacked the ICRC compound in Jalalabad, which is the capital city of the Ningar province in the eastern part of the country. And the outcome was the death of one of our colleagues, an Afghan. Two hours later the attackers were dead and all our people were regrouped. It is brutal, despicable and frankly from our viewpoint very senseless attack against an organization that has been present in Afghanistan for the past 30 years. There isn't a single Afghan that wouldn't recognize the fact that we are strictly independent and humanitarian in what we do. So there is a lot of incomprehension about why four people would actually kill themselves to attack an unprotected structure of a strictly humanitarian organization like ours. All movements have been frozen throughout Afghanistan. There is not a single ICRC delegate or employee that is moving, taking the roads today in Afghanistan. Our sub-delegation in Jalalabad has been closed. So we are reconnecting with the government, we are reconnecting with the armed opposition as well to try and determine exactly what happened and why. It was clearly a planned attack with the level of organization and means that rules out a kind of isolated incident by some individual. It has always been dangerous to be a humanitarian operator in Afghanistan. There is a long series of very serious incidents. We have also paid the price of blood in Afghanistan in the past, in the past years. It has been dangerous, it is dangerous and this attack and the quality of this attack compels us precisely to redefine the level of dangerosity there is for humanitarian players and for us to operate in the area.