Thank you very much for this important question.
The funding issue is always critical. I've had the opportunity in the general study to brief the committee that we still receive generous funding from the Middle East and to a lesser extent sub-Saharan Africa. Just to give you some numbers, we started the year in Mexico with 2% of the funding we need to respond in particular to people who are in the caravan or those who come on their own. Two per cent of the funding was made available to us to start the year.
If you look at the situation of internal displacement in the three countries, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, where it is important to address the root causes and also to have those who are being forcibly returned settle down, we have extremely limited funding—I don't have the number, but it's extremely limited funding—to provide livelihood opportunities, to help children go to school or to provide medical and psychological care to survivors of sexual and gender-based violence.
Venezuela has in relative terms attracted quite sizeable funding. What is important is that we don't forget the 3.4 million who are outside Venezuela. That's of concern not only to UNHCR but to all the partners. The attention, in particular from the media and some political circles, has been very much within Venezuela, but we have 3.4 million Venezuelans outside, and it's becoming difficult for the countries in the region, which are all low- and middle-income countries, to provide all the services. It has created tension with the host communities. We have seen xenophobic attacks, in particular in Ecuador.