I wish it were. It's not. My responsibility is Asia, so I'll restrict it to countries....
We have seen Pakistan, where this has been a tremendous problem, again very often with the government accused of being the actor or suspected of being the actor.
Let me answer this in another way. Yes, in other countries this problem exists as well, and it seems to rise and fall and is clearly tied to the political situation. What we're seeing in Sri Lanka is something different from what we've seen in Sri Lanka in the past, which makes it look more and more authoritarian, that things are moving in a way that it's going to get worse for journalists. You speak to them and say, “Well, the elections are coming” or “When do you think you can go back to Sri Lanka?”, and people are saying, “It's not going to get better, not for the foreseeable future.” One person put a five- or six-year time limit on it.
But what we see is Sri Lanka beginning to look more and more heavy-handed towards the media, and we're certainly seeing coverage of the war stifled and we're seeing coverage of the defence establishment stifled, but we expect to see that go into other issues as well. There's still criticism in the papers of how the government is handling the economy or negotiating new loans or some of those things, and those are still open and there's the best array of opinion. But we just see this space shrinking more and more and more. We don't see any force strong enough within Sri Lanka to push it back out. I think the strength or whatever power to do that will have to come from the outside.