Thank you very much, Chair.
I just want to thank everyone.
I'm so sorry, Mr. Bermejo, that we couldn't hear you, because I think this is such an important issue. Rob Oliphant earlier on pointed out that you cannot pick and choose what are human rights. Some human beings are not more important than others. No human beings are more equal than others, so human rights are a universal issue. I just wanted to say that because I feel strongly about that.
I have a question for Dr. Sully from the Guttmacher Institute. Can you tell me what happens? Do you have data that tells us what happens when a young person in a conflict situation is raped—because rape is now a tactic of war—and they cannot have access to abortion? What happens to that young person? What do they do? How can they cope with that and is there any way...? We see it happening in Ukraine right now, and when someone goes into Poland or into Hungary, they don't have access to abortion. That's the first question I have.
Second, if you don't have access to legal abortion, you're going to have to go and get an illegal abortion. That has been done since the dawn of history, and we know that causes extreme illness. The reproductive organs of many young people are harmed because they have unsafe abortions, and many young people around the world die from having unsafe abortions.
My question to you is this: It seems that everyone wants to focus on abortion. I would like to make sure that's not all we are focused on. The point is what happens to people when they're stuck in a conflict situation or in areas where they're pregnant and don't want to be and they're very young? What happens to them if they have no access to legal abortion?