It's certainly true that historically in Afghanistan there have been issues of torture and abuse. If you look at the Soviet period or even the republican period that preceded it or the monarchy that preceded that, you don't have a great track record in the country.
What's important now is that with the assistance of countries like Canada and the capacity-building programs we're putting in place, that's changing. It doesn't change overnight, though. You don't from one day to the next flick a switch and suddenly have a system that has been comprehensively reformed. You have to engage in training; you have to improve the facilities. And we've put the resources behind that.