Okay.
I would add to what Dr. Elsadig said, particularly relating to South Kordofan and eastern Sudan.
In South Kordofan, a recent survey we did of 1,000 villages gave a figure of around one-third that didn't have enough food for one meal a day. In the east, the figure is around one-half. So that's quite significantly food insecure.
South Kordofan has no permanent watercourse, so it's very dependent on seasonal rains, and that also makes food security very problematic.
We have a long hunger gap in Sudan, usually from January. It depends on the rains; next year it will be a bit later. Maybe it will start in February or March and go until July, when really nothing grows. It's very hard to feed people, especially in that time.
That's relevant especially in the light of the referendum and what will happen after that.