One of the concerns many people have when they've learned of the situation in Congo.... You have in your document here 2,200 cases of recorded rape from January to June of 2008 in North Kivu, and I think the numbers are much higher. This is what has been reported.
It's not stopping. I guess one thing is to report--you identify a problem--but the other is to stop. One of the things we heard, as a follow-up to the engagement here on the Hill, was about policewomen who have gone to Sudan to train women to be intervenors.
To deal with victims is one thing. The other is to deal with the phenomenon that is rape as a weapon of war. It's very difficult to deal with if people are simply saying they'll deal with the aftermath. I think there's some movement to train women to deal with stopping rape, as opposed to documenting rape.