 So here we are outside the jail in La Paz where actually hundreds of people have been arrested and taken in here at different protests. Most of the people inside, well the people that you see outside here waiting are relatives of the people inside. They are mostly indigenous people, campuzinos, people who have been arrested at different protests. And they're being charged with sedition, some of them are treason, some of them with malinquency. I was just allowed to go inside as a press and was able to talk to one of the young women in her case. She's an anthropology student at the university and she had her Wipala. That's the flag of the indigenous flag that you see flying all over the place here. She was carrying Wipala and she was not even in a demonstration, it was a demonstration going by. And they started shooting the tear gas at people and she went to hide behind the kiosk and because she was there with her indigenous flag, she was arrested and at first was accused of everything, nothing treason, which is a very difficult charge. She finally got a lawyer and they reduced the charges but she's been in jail now, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday without being able to see a judge to get a hearing. And her case is similar to many others who have just been picked up. We met some other people who said that they were again sort of walking down the street and were picked up, swooped up in a crowd. Other people from the indigenous community have been part of the protests but the way they're treated inside, it's very, very tiny cells, they're all crowded in there. They have to sleep on the floor, they're not given any food. There are a couple of hours that relatives are allowed to come in and bring the food but that's the only food that they have, very rough treatment inside. And as many of these people who are coming from the countryside, they don't have money and they have been here since Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Some of them sleeping in the street. They have had to get money from the community to be able to hire lawyers. They don't understand anything of what this process is about. A woman inside was crying and saying she left her children alone and had money to get back home. This is real hardship for people and it's part of the repression that's been unleashed against the indigenous community who are trying to get the government that they consider the legitimate government back and so they've been participating in protests for that. But this is meant to be a warning to other people that we can pick you up, that we can throw you in prison, that we can charge you with anything you want to and make your lives miserable. And so you see, as we were walking around here, groups of indigenous women who have all been waiting since Friday and today's supposed to be a big demonstration. Surely there will be a lot of other people arrested but we wanted to give you a sense of how it's all the indigenous people inside there, how they're being treated and how this is part of a co-attempt and part of the larger policy that they are planning and undertaking right now to intimidate, harass anybody that stands up for their rights. We'll come back on live when the demonstrations arrive here. Thank you.