Let me just say a couple of words about that. Certainly we'll be in a better position after today, with our secretary general participating in today's meeting.
Of course we have been following closely the interim commission's work—the creation of the commission and the work of the commission to date. I think it is fair to say that the commission had some start-up difficulties in terms of getting going. I think we can all appreciate why some of that might be the case, given the complexity of moving forward on multiple fronts at the same time.
In these last months of what is supposed to be an 18-month commission, I think it's yet to be seen whether we're going to see real traction and clarity in terms of decision-making and so on going forward. Certainly from a Red Cross point of view, we think that the effort to create that kind of mechanism in which the Haitian government, with the international community, however organized—and the international community has made the choices as to how it wants to be organized in this regard—has the opportunity to see the breadth of what assistance is possible for the country and to have a say in terms of how that assistance is organized.
Some of the mechanical questions, as to how that's been done in terms of projects coming well to the committee and things like that, are details. I think that the actual creation and the intent to set that up and create that unity of leadership has been an important step for Haiti. As I said at the very beginning, we'll have a better sense ourselves of what the day-to-day workings of the committee are, now that we're much more integrated in the workings of it.
Richard, I don't know if you have anything to say from the in-Haiti perspective.