It's still achieving results. That is true particularly for malaria, I would suggest, because we have had some successful bed net distribution campaigns. That's not too difficult. You don't need an elaborate health system for providing communities and villages with bed nets. They have an effect then on malaria, and we've seen it. It's much more difficult when it comes to, let's say, TB treatment or AIDS treatment, for which you have to follow up over months and sometimes years and establish your systems.
Even that is happening. I'm not saying it's not happening at all, but it's much more difficult because, simply, of logistics. The roads are not there. You cannot reach many areas. You have rainy seasons during which parts of the country are blocked. We then try to work with partner agencies such as the Red Cross, UNDP, and others who might have access to these regions that they help, and sometimes with international NGOs as well. But this is a kind of logistical nightmare sometimes under those circumstances. Still. I would claim that some reasonable results are achieved also in those countries.