Actually, I will call on Greg Chin to respond, because he has been involved in this.
Yes, there are many human rights NGOs in China, active ones, legally allowed ones, that work. There are all kinds of problems with the NGO community in China, partly because the government has a strange way of....
Again, I would re-emphasize Professor Potter's view that the Chinese Communist Party's main concern is about competing organizations. The way they handle that in terms of NGOs is to have a regulation that allows only either local grassroots organizations that don't have a national network or national headquarters, or national umbrella groups that don't have local grassroots organizations.
There are some organizations that get around this by registering as businesses, and that's a grey zone. But the person who really knows more about this is Greg, who worked with China's NGO community. But there are many Chinese NGOs working on specific human rights areas, and with which our government does cooperate. It has cooperated in the past, and we would like to open more channels on this, because these grassroots groups do real work, and they improve the lives of women, the lives of prisoners, and the lives of migrant workers. These are some of the areas where we have shown particular concern.
Perhaps Greg can elaborate on this.