No. Religious extremism is a completely different thing, in my opinion. The government tries to use extremism to suppress rights. For example, in Ogaden, most of the people are Somalis and Muslims. The government talks about terrorism and all kinds of things in connection with Somalis, and there is all kinds of repression. Human Rights Watch has issued a statement about that. That is the government's interpretation of things.
What I am talking about is, within the Ethiopian opposition, as far as I see it, there's a sense of pluralism. There's a sense of acceptance of diversity, including religious rights. At the same time, there's a clear understanding that society should not be dominated by a single religious extreme idea, where a religious political party would be the rule of the game. So that's what I was referring to.