What I do know is that we—I also have Canadian colleagues who were with us in Afghanistan—had warnings on the situation. We as an organization stand next to the population. Throughout the violence, which started in May, we have been able to continue to run our activities with our international and national teams.
This we can only do by being in contact with all the armed actors in the conflict, and that's what we did, leading also to a situation where we had 300 staff members living for two and a half weeks with 500 patients in the Boost hospital in Lashkar Gah, and where all actors involved in the fighting ensured to avoid the hospital at that time. That was last summer.