 Over the last couple of weeks, the Nigerian government has made some positive inroads and according to reports they've rescued over 700 women and girls. The road to recovery for those who have been rescued, it's a very long road. What's next for them? What do you think the government, communities, civil society groups, what should they really be prioritising now in reintegrating these women and children back into society? So we developed a tool that we call the verification, authentication and reintegration system. It's a simple tool, basically laying out the various activities and methods of verifying people who have been kidnapped. So we need to establish the identity again, most of them. I mean think of it again. We were calling for archibog girls, but there have been news that would say so-and-so number of people have been abducted, so-and-so number after the abduction of archibogs or even before the abduction, the massive scale. Of the abduction was one of the reasons why it resonated with everybody. But there have been these other abductions that our government never confirmed or conveyed. So suddenly we realised that we actually had so many more people than even archibog girls who lost their identity. It was like they never existed until they were rescued. So the system that establishes identity again for them, true identity, it's one of the things that we've said to the government to adopt so that it's not that they are just one of the number of many people that have been rescued. Then we also have within that tool, we call it the tree arrows, the rehabilitation, the resettlement and the reintegration. The very important psychosocial post-traumatic counselling that a number of them would require, we said that has to be instant and that has to be done professionally. We've not been a society that placed a lot of importance to those kinds of metals of getting people to heal. We instantly just get up and keep going whenever anything happened in the past. But we're saying that those kinds of support services would need to be provided. Some of that is going on already in the camps where they're being kept. But then there is a whole work of the real healing process. Some of the girls have been said to be pregnant. Now that completely changes everything in their lives. So the care, the support and what they're going to need as a family, some of them are going to be rejected by their immediate families that are saying we don't know who you are anymore. We're not sure we want a child that has been said by somebody who is a terrorist. So there's going to be a lot of stigmatisation going on. For us as a movement, we've been an advocacy movement. What we've said is that we're going to stay being an advocacy movement. Let's not go entering into a field that is not natural to the way our movement is configured. However, we're going to be very, very adroit in identifying partnership. So we're already working with some key partners in the development sector and with other professional bodies to get around the very clear support that the girls and the women and the children that are being rescued will have to go through. We'll have to be given in order to get them back into safe habitation and restoration of livelihood. We just really need this to be an episode that does not destroy them for life.