 Based on our own experience and looking at what is happening in Brazil as a whole, I think that the issue of land insecurity is huge, it's massive. Because, first of all, let's say that because of the informality, because of the insecurity and the informality in all levels of society. Informality in the land, informality in marriage, informality in inheritance. So women are very much insecure in their land rights. So what we are seeing is if you combine this with something that I cannot keep not saying, which is the racism of this society and how in looking at this whole drama, how black women are on the front line, they are in the front line in the schools, in the medical situation and they are dying because of this, they are low paid. But also, they are facing the insecurity, let's say, when they have the windows and we are already acting to protect their lands. But also as informal workers, and I think that's very necessary to go back in the informality of jobs. It just passed a law a few years ago that widened the informality and invisibility of work. We have the whole majority of our population don't have any kind of social protection. And they are some, as Commissioner Pratt said, they are fighting to feed their families. So they are in the formal sector. They work to feed their families on the next, very next day. So the drama that we are facing now is above from everything else on the political side, like land grabbing, illegal logging, this government that's taking the degree of security that they have already have, some people already have, like in the indigenous in the Amazonia. But also they are putting a lot of stress on women. So the dilemma of women is living right now is between protecting themselves and keeping isolation in such horrible conditions or feeding their families. So our war right now is to save the people, the lives of the people from hunger. We are working very hard to try to protect those who are the most vulnerable, to access the, like say the emergency funds that the government are putting for the very low, the invisible population, but also trying to protect the people of the dilemma of going out to feed their families or being in isolation and trying to keep safe from the virus. So it's a huge dilemma. It's a huge problem. It's a threat, it's a real threat in terms of land and human rights. I think that we are talking about food security. We are talking about advocate job and make us think what is going to be our society after this pandemic. How are we going to cope with all these things that are now so are shaking our society? They are shaking, they have been revealed something that was, we knew, but it was not so clear. And I think that, yeah, Brazil right now, the huge problem is that land inequality and land insecurity, insecurity of land, food insecurity, it's a present, it's now, it's a struggle for today, it's not for tomorrow, it's a struggle for today. And how to protect these people most vulnerable? How to protect indigenous people from the Amazon here? We, I'm sure most of people in this audience know that we can see, we can witness the killing, massive killing of indigenous population due to land dispute, illegal logging, illegal stratification in the Amazon and in other parts of Brazil. And everything done with the authorization of the national government. So I think that, yeah, on the ground the situation is really, oh yeah, in our world.