This is, of course, where we need a very forceful protection response inside the camps. That is one of the issues we engage heavily in, ensuring that you have protection and monitoring by people who are consistently present in the camps, making sure that minorities or vulnerable groups, or women and girls who are faced with sexual abuse, can receive the protection and the proper treatment and support they may need.
I do agree that a camp solution is definitely not an ideal solution. That's also why we need to work on out-of-camp solutions for refugees. More and more countries under the CRRF and the global compact on refugees luckily engage in non-camp solutions and much more durable solutions, where refugees can get access to jobs, to land, and to education and health services. They can therefore engage in a community where they will be better protected.
I agree that this is a severe problem. I visited just before the summer the Moria camp on Lesbos. In Europe, the UNHCR did a study on women and girls who faced sexual abuse passing through Greece, and one quarter of them faced these violations inside the camps in the hot spots in Greece. Here you have women and girls struggling to cross the Mediterranean or the Iberian Sea on a difficult journey, receiving what they believe to be safety in Europe, and ending up in a camp where they face violations. It is not acceptable. It defeats all our principles in terms of human rights and human dignity. We definitely need to scale up our protection response inside the camps.