Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My questions are shockingly similar to Mr. Chong's. I have four areas I want to look at. One is the nature of the blockade. The second is the effect of the blockade. The third is the role of Russia on the road, and the fourth is the role of Azerbaijan as a government. The fifth one, since you say things with such certainty, would be how you get your information. I'm trying to understand, if there is a lack of telecommunication and a lack of connectivity, where you are getting your information.
With respect to the nature of the blockade, you've said you're not really able to describe it to us. I have seen the news reports, but with respect to the effect of the blockade, I'd like to get into that a little bit. This area of Azerbaijan is not an island. There is a road out, the Lachin road to Armenia, but there is also connectivity between other parts of Azerbaijan and that. Even with respect to that, the governments of both Armenia and Azerbaijan have said that there are supply trucks coming in from the International Committee of the Red Cross and that there have been people who have been ill who have been taken out of the region and across the road into Armenia.
Are those governments wrong? What is the evidence that is saying that the blockade is actually affecting what you're saying it's affecting?