I think Yemen, first of all, is one of the huge international tragedies. I can't call it otherwise. What is going on there is a real tragedy.
The Global Fund has been providing programs for all these diseases—HIV, TB, and malaria—in Yemen for many years. When the civil war started, it obviously became more difficult to deliver drugs and commodities, yet we maintained that even through most of the early phase of the civil war, even when there was no kind of national government anymore with which we could co-operate. The disease program still continued, and we managed to bring supplies into Yemen until very recently. We also tried to work with the exiled government in Saudi Arabia, which provided some kind of protection for the areas that were under their control.
However, right now the situation has deteriorated so much that almost no humanitarian agency can still operate in Yemen, including the Global Fund. It is impossible for us at the moment to bring supplies and commodities to Yemen. It's extremely unfortunate, and we are constantly trying to find ways to do so.
To your question, I think that at the moment, the international community is failing Yemen. The situation of that civil war is such that almost no humanitarian agency can enter the different areas.