Maybe I could just go back to the initial framing of your question. You were talking about the NAPWA and whether or not we support the overall national action plan for women in Afghanistan.
Part of the NAPWA is what happens inside the Ministry of Women's Affairs, but much of what happens with respect to NAPWA is what happens inside other ministries. So there will be benchmarks in the NAPWA associated with what the Ministry of Education needs to do to ensure that women's interests are advanced in the context of education. It is similar for health and for a variety of different areas.
It's possible for us—and we have the intention to do this and have done it in the past—to ensure that the ministries we're working with are actually implementing their NAPWA commitments. That's one piece. Then there's the piece you're asking about, of direct support to the Ministry of Women's Affairs.
As Ms. Ducros said, we can look at that. Our understanding is that there are two issues here. One is the issue of the political will of the government of Afghanistan; then there's the issue of funding. If there's not the political will to advance the NAPWA across ministries, and not just within the Ministry of Women's Affairs, you could potentially fund and support the Ministry of Women's Affairs without making much progress on women's rights.
So it's a complex picture, and we need to look at the full picture.