 Operation Wendy is an operation that occurred over a three-month period looking at bringing together the countries to really, on the ground, apprehend or detect or investigate the people involved in the poaching of elephants and the illicit trade of ivory itself. So it brought together West Africa and Central African countries around a common platform, that threat that is a significant threat right now that is being faced on the elephant population and the conservational values of elephant species. And our action was to bring the countries together on a common platform to get them working together looking at transnational investigations. Partnerships for the Environmental Crime Program are critical. I mean, without working with other partners, with other elements or organisations around the world, you cannot stop or suppress the criminality-engaged environment in our environment by diversity and natural resources. We work with non-governmental communities, with governments, with other government or agencies that are outside of the general enforcement stream, such as aid agencies like USAID or NORAD in Norway. They're providing their expertise in financial investment and development, and we're providing the international support mechanisms that allow our enforcement partners around the world to be more effective and efficient in catching the criminals. In Nairobi and Kenya, we are holding on the 6th of November the Environmental Compliance and Enforcement Committee Conference. This is a point in time for our global community with regards to environmental compliance and enforcement to come together to design a strategy, to commit to that strategy to move forward into the future, to really take that fight or to tackle the criminals in a new manner, in a new combined collaborative manner. Operation Wendy is one of the mechanisms or one of the activities that we want to help encourage future ones to occur. Operation Wendy had great success. Our program in Interpol, working with our member countries, will be having other impacts across our other projects, looking at things such as illegal forest crime or timber crime, illegal fishing, looking at tiger exploitation of criminals, or looking at waste criminality as well. So over the coming months leading up to this 6th of November, we will be conducting and performing and delivering other outcomes, other impacts that will position the global enforcement community in the right spot to be able to move forward with greater strength, collaboration and coordination.