Thank you very much, all three of you, for being here today.
Mr. Mwenengabo, I was really touched by your remarks. Actually, I feel the same emotion and the same sadness when it comes to the DRC, because of all the countries in Africa, it is probably the one that has the most potential.
If we look at the current political climate right now, you have elections coming up on December 23. You have three completely different characters running for the presidency. Whether you have Shadary, who is being supported by Kabila; whether you have Martin Fayulu, who does not have broad-based support; or whether you have Tshisekedi, who does not have broad-based support, ultimately, in the last 58 years of the DRC, there has been no peaceful transition from one political power to the other political power.
If you look at the situation right now, it is not one armed conflict, there are hundreds of armed conflicts that are going on with small groups from village to village. But the potential there, if you look at it right now.... The estimate from the IMF is that there is 24 trillion U.S. dollars' worth of minerals and precious metals there.
The DRC is not—
Sorry...?