Yes, thank you very much.
As you mentioned, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is the most widely recognized and ratified document we have. I am pleased to say that recently Somalia has also signed on to the document, so it has become even more ratified. We do have some optional protocols that were written after the original convention was drafted. The reason for that is that it is significantly easier to draft and sign on to optional protocols than to revise the convention itself. That's why that's been happening. Among the optional protocols, there is one on child soldiers, which does update the documents, as you mentioned. The convention itself also looks at issues of child marriage, etc., so there are options within the convention to deal with this language.
One of the challenges that we have with all of these conventions is that states have the option to have reservations on certain articles, and that's where, hopefully, within the UN system and across bilateral negotiations, there can be conversations in terms of encouraging states not to have certain reservations about different articles within the convention.