--it's where their schools are, it's where their families are.
We have a lot of experiences in the international response community of those kinds of resettlements that have themselves been very unhappy experiences. That's why we in the Red Cross have been sympathetic to people's demand to rebuild where they were living as best and where we can, because in terms of the longer-term sustainability, the economic environment they're in, their own livelihoods and so on, and their own well-being as a family, they will be in a better situation if we're able to do that.
That doesn't respond to the millions of people. We made a commitment as an international Red Cross to respond to the needs of 30,000 families, and that's the commitment we're working very hard to deliver, but it doesn't respond to the 130,000 or 150,000 families.
