That's a really excellent question. It's a big challenge for us. Ian and I are legal guardians over these children. In fact, we got baby number 91 yesterday, so we have one more than we had on record today.
It's a challenge. Many of the people living in Swaziland do not have identities and they do not have identity cards. From a payment perspective for our farm workers, we were paying them with cash and now we want them to have bank accounts. We're pushing them to get bank accounts, but in order to get a bank account, you need to have an ID card. In order to have an ID card, you need to have a birth certificate.
For 250 people on the farm, we are working tirelessly to provide transport, provide days off, and continue the payment for their workdays so they can go and get the birth certificate, which requires them to go home to their local chief and have someone prove that they exist. It's a bigger problem that we are addressing on a large scale on our farm. For our babies, when a baby is dumped.... Last week, a newborn was put in a plastic bag by his mother and left by the side of the river. Before the neighbours found the baby, the river crabs found him and ate a good chunk of him. The baby has lived. The baby has had a colostomy and is now with us. He will be one of the future leaders of the nation, but getting a birth certificate for that child is hard.
But the government works very closely with us, and the deputy prime minister's office is very committed to making sure we get the birth certificate of that child, so if that child needed to leave the country or, down the road, attend university internationally, which would be great, we will have that birth certificate.