The credible organizations issuing reports in one form or another are almost too numerous to name, but the last report of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, which is intergovernmental, was from an on-site visit from last May, which was four or five months into the current President's period. There is a preliminary report of the International Commission of Jurists, based in Geneva, a highly recognized organization; I think their final report on the state of the judiciary in Honduras is expected sometime in late fall. This is about a 10- to 12-page report on the overall problems in the judiciary and the problems of impunity in the country.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and Amnesty International have both had different kinds of reports. One thing I would emphasize is that the best work that goes on in Honduras is done by Honduran organizations. I would also say that what I've been struck by in my experience working through the civil society commission is the care that Bertha Oliva's organization takes to document facts almost conservatively. They're very careful to make sure they can only claim what the facts show. I've seen a number of cases of people taking issue with whether or not they've interpreted something correctly and have said that this may just be a crime situation. They're not going to definitively say it's a political act. I think that shows great care. When you see their stats, their stats border on being conservative, even though they're frightening.
Thank you, Chair.