Can I add something very quickly? We think of refugees in camps, but we have to remember that a very significant proportion of refugees are not in camps.
In Colombia, for example, we saw a million Venezuelans cross the border, which is 2,200 kilometres long, and disappear into the country. They speak the same language. They're indistinguishable from Colombians, so they blend in—except that they don't. They have difficulty working. They have difficulty being accepted. They have difficulty supporting themselves. That forces a lot of people to become marginalized. It forces women in particular to resort to the sex trade to support themselves or their families. It also makes them very vulnerable to traffickers and others who want to exploit them. It makes them vulnerable to the drug cartels, which want to use them as mules.
What we've urged in the case of Colombia, in response to the Venezuelan crisis, is that we find a way as quickly as possible to regularize the refugees who are not in camps but are in the regular population. Allow them to work. Allow them access to education and social services. That's a question of funding, and we have recommendations on funding. We recommend that payment to UNHCR should be compulsory in the UN. It should be mandatory. It shouldn't be a voluntary pass-the-hat, because that's not working. We recommend that the private sector become involved and issue refugee bonds to raise money that way.
I will wind up by saying that it's not just the camps.