 We're responding in this area because it's an area that's obviously at risk with very close by a major outbreak of cholera with some cholera cases in this part as well and at the same time it's a place where there's not many other actors and where we have established our presence since a while where we've been working in this place before building latrines, doing sensitization, so for us it was natural to focus on this place. The population here faces many challenges. For most there's been a very large demographic pressure on this community because most of the people here are IDPs that fled from Malacal, from the town when the conflict hit there. They come on top of a population that was already pretty vulnerable prior to this crisis. So the cholera, they came like a third layer of challenges. So that's one of the reasons why we try to focus on working in this area. We set up a cholera treatment center which is like a basic hospital that can deal with the people that actually have cholera. Everything that we do here has been in very much collaboration with the South Sudanese Red Cross. Really from minute one of this cholera outbreak we've been working together very closely because without this local buy-in and this local community that organizes itself through the South Sudanese Red Cross none of our response would have held and would have lasted for so long. We're working with awareness and the team that's sitting in the center here and the team on the sea side that's doing the rush for the people that are coming on board. With awareness, we're going from house to house. We're going from house to house. We're going from house to house. With awareness, we're going from house to house. We're going from house to house and we're going to- First, everyone's gonna do water this way. Our job is prenup that's all we do. We've won so many things on our hand. We've won so many things on our hands. We're lucky in this place, we showed what water has been surface-to- geography. We're not going to increase water that much, but in our natural water, it's very extreme. And so we are now going from one of the tolerance we received from theors Hello. Ladies and gentlemen, we've had enough. The people here are all from the village. We are all from the village. We are all from the village. We are all from the village. We are all from the village. We are all from the village. Today we are starting a distribution. And the distribution is very important. It is one of our bensions because the receive's up today is Angerakan. They can wash their hands with soap and clean water before eating the food. And the Angerakan also, they can put the clean water in this Angerakan for drinking. We, in Kodok here, we are ready for the cholera. If there is cholera, we have the power to take cholera away from our community. Because every family, every person here had information about cholera.