Thank you for that question.
We don't have great data, because it is hardest to collect data where there are humanitarian emergencies and fragile contexts. Over the period in which the most recent conflict erupted in Tigray, we were actually collecting data in Ethiopia on a national study. We were not able to get evidence from the Tigray region to understand what was happening—both in terms of provision of SRH services and health facilities and in women's needs and use of contraceptive methods and other SRH services—at that time.
I think we know broadly that during humanitarian emergencies the SRH needs are greatest and that SRH services should be part of primary care. They are often forgotten and not included as part of the humanitarian response, yet the needs are greater. There are high levels of sexual violence. We know that is the case. People have their access to health facilities and to services interrupted, so we need to be including SRH services as part of the humanitarian response.
The Inter-Agency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crises has put forward a minimum initial service package that really lays out how, in that moment of responding in a humanitarian emergency, to put forward a full package of SRH services to meet those needs.
I think we need to stop neglecting this as part of a humanitarian response in Tigray as well as in other conflicts and fragile contexts.