Monsieur Martin, thank you very much for your question about democracy, development, and corruption. I think you're right, corruption is such a huge phenomenon all over the world. It's not an African thing, it's not Latin American. We have seen what is going on in the United States and in Europe. We have a problem in the world.
However, I think that democracy is the only system that can at least at some point put the question of corruption on the agenda. Recently in Mali, as you know, we offered the Malian government to build an auditor general system like we have in this country, and they did that. When the Malian auditor general published his first report, it was huge news for a week in Mali, because it was revealing a lot of things. It was gossiping before that. There was a lot of extraordinary information for people there. We will not be able to do that in Zimbabwe. We can work to build institutions that will correct what has to be corrected in a country like Mali, but not in Zimbabwe.
I think we should also pay a lot of attention to the peer review in Africa. It's not a great system. It did not produce a lot of things; it's a new system. Well, that's a system that the Africans have developed by themselves. It's difficult to condemn the colleague who is the head of state, and blah, blah, blah, but recently the African Commission was quite clear in condemning Mugabe, the Mugabe regime, in very clear text and what it has produced for the Zimbabwe citizen.
We approach political parties cautiously. I ask Wayne MacKay to say to you why, and I'm sure he will talk about Egypt.