To respond to the question about the success of income-generating micro-finance work in the churches, that's not an area we work in, but I'm sure some of our international partners—maybe in Europe or the U.S. or elsewhere—who support the Sudan Council of Churches do that. Our area is more around civic education, peace-building, essentially supporting women's empowerment and self-advocacy.
But I want to say something concerning the neighbouring countries. Joseph alluded to the Lord's Resistance Army. It's now a regional phenomenon in Sudan, even up towards southern Darfur, but also in northeast Congo, certainly still in northern Uganda. Increasingly, without being conspiratorial as such, people believe that this is a group that will be an incredible foil by the National Congress Party to wreak havoc in the south.
The Sudan Council of Churches is saying that this can't be solved militarily. But the populations do need to be protected, and so we need to get back to the Juba peace process, which was initiated with the help of the churches, to see whether there's some way to resolve this. This is a group that does not have a political platform or wing. It is self-serving, and the benefactor, one has to believe, may in fact be the National Congress Party. But I'm willing to be disabused of that notion by Joseph.