Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the witnesses, again. With their expertise, we will be able to do things better and be better. That's the purpose of our study.
Ms. Frogh, your comments are very interesting, as are those of all the other witnesses.
You mentioned minorities. At the beginning of our study, we had a representative from the Hazara community. In June 2021, before the Taliban took over, Mr. Mirzad gave powerful testimony to the committee. I was particularly moved when he said that the life of a Hazara in Afghanistan is that of a death row inmate, living on probation, waiting for an imminent execution. I believe that this sentence is even truer today, as this is now the daily life of a majority of Afghans, Hazaras or not, who want to flee the country.
Can you tell us what the situation is for Hazaras, at the moment, in Afghanistan?