I'm happy to speak to the humanitarian implications, particularly around the issue of health care.
Unfortunately, often in these conflict situations we have increasingly been seeing targeting and criminality around infrastructures the people rely on, health care being a key one among them. Obviously the goal will be longer-term restoration of those health systems, and development efforts will be needed to that end. In the immediate term, with the ramping up of the humanitarian response that we're starting to see now, that means we will have humanitarian partners supporting an emergency health service response, which will fill in some of the emerging gaps.
Whether it's enough [Technical difficulty—Editor] remains to be seen, but we will see partners like the ICRC doing more on the health side and partners like UNICEF able to deliver some of those maternal and child health services that the national system is not able to do at this time. Our humanitarian partners also have the mechanisms to bring these services to people, sometimes in ways that make them more comfortable to use them when there are protection issues around going to centres.