We need to support the Congolese. Every time the Congolese have wanted to take those opportunities, they have been suppressed. I can tell you in 2015, in January, when people tried to do a peaceful demonstration against the Kabila regime, those demonstrations were heavily reprimanded: 47 people were killed. After, in a mass grave, they found 425 bodies of people who were killed. The international community did not stand by us Congolese.
With regard to your question about how we bring stakeholders in the Congo—those who have interests—I can tell you that the people who have interests in the Congo are not the politicians. With the politicians, their interest is their money and the power to control.
The people who have all to lose are the 70%, the young—youth below 30—who have never worked, who have only known suffering, who are resilient; and millions of women, who are being raped on a daily basis, who have nothing to hope for apart from prayers, apart from hopes that tomorrow might be better.
I'm saying that if we look from that perspective, we have religious actors, for example, who are a strong institution. We have well-meaning Congolese, and—