Thank you for the question.
Very briefly, the law-writing process in our project is an important part, but it's not the only part. The project also has the proactive element, where we actually go to the communities in the provinces in which we work, and we work with community leaders, be it security.... We work with religious leaders, with mullahs, training them on women's rights issues. As such, over the past two years we have actually trained nearly 14,000 people with respect to women's rights in their own communities, and this is in a country where the state is weak and police are not present everywhere. This kind of training is tremendously important, so that community leaders, men principally--religious leaders, mullahs--understand the whole concept of women's rights. This is a very important part of the project. Obviously, today's hearing is on the family law-writing element, but that's an element of the project that we're also working on.