 This is for TB patients. We already got the medicine for them. This is the malachem, the malachem. We have TB patients for U.S. departure for 16 people. And right now we've got some of them who is negative, effective TB come to take medicine for me every day. In behind us we have the TB village up the mountainside in Malach. So what happens here? What's your work? Okay, I'm the dog nurse. I work for L.M. I have to come here every day for the dog. This means TB treatment. So we have like 12 people in here for the L.M. responsibility including the Australia cases. There is two, there is three M.D.R. including the AMI cases. But actually we just take care for the TB patients that train from L.M. that they're going to depart to USA. How many people are sick with TB up here? In my responsibility it's 40. And why are they kept apart from other people? Because there is a positive area. Okay, because that's why we just come from the negative area. So we just keep him for during the contagious time like two months and then we will decide later. Depends on the sputum culture result and the x-ray. Now this very sweaty little room at the top of the hill at the Maila camp of the TB village. The so-called positive zone is where I.O.M nurses give out drugs for a multi-drug resistant TB on a daily basis. Several patients here come with a point of time every day to be observed taking a handful of life-saving drugs which will clear up their multi-drug resistant TB and enable them to carry on the resettlement process to go and live in the countries of their choosing.