Thank you very much.
Yes, I want to talk about how to deal with legislation on abortion that some of you were talking about. In my country, the discussion about abortion leaves no space to address all the issues about the vulnerability and exploitation that women are facing. In my country, women are barred, because of years of poverty and violence. We just find the solutions that many of the funds...and the actions that some organizations do are just a political resignation to violence. Why? There is that connection to the trauma of women that provokes this dissociation. The dissociation leads to their vulnerability, and their vulnerability is like green grass for exploitation. These vulnerabilities that women are facing have been creating industries of exploitation, even in abortion.
I say that because in my country, we have no accountability, for example, about why women are having an abortion. We have no accountability about which of these women are being trafficked or living in violence. We definitely have no accountability if these women come back to the same environments that generate trauma and disassociation.
We have a circle of political affirmation of vulnerability that makes the most vulnerable women invisible in all the programs and all the policies. With the limited interpretation of their autonomy, we are not seeing the exploitation, pain, suffering and trauma that women are facing, which affects all their decisions. Sometimes they will decide on the side of the trafficker and the violence—