I think I will have to answer that question, because Elissa had left Kandahar and Afghanistan at that time.
It was very significant. What we saw there was, as we say in French, a crise de conscience among women concerning their role and importance in society. There was a very important and significant mobilization of women to protest the law. What happened, and I have said this to the committee before, was that you had the beginning of a debate involving women, and not only women who were against the issue, but also women who had views that were religiously based.
That was a very defining moment. In the recent history of modern Afghanistan, all of a sudden you have women who have decided that they have to be involved, to be active in defining their own destiny. That's very good, and it's recognized. I think, by and large, women want to maintain it, and I think that is what you heard from Mrs. Sobhrang two weeks ago.
It's work that needs to progress. We need to support it, and we're doing so. It's actually quite positive.