There are two parts to your question. One is what we can do inside Venezuela. Very much the UN Secretary General has been offering to assist the Government of Venezuela in the delivery of assistance. You know that over the weekend all the borders, including the maritime border and the special air, were closed by the Government of Venezuela, but the UN stands ready to assist the authorities in delivering humanitarian aid inside the country.
Now, with respect to the needs in the countries that are hosting refugees, indeed it's going to be a major increase in numbers, which is going to strain the resources of those host countries. You may have seen that over the last three days, the border between Colombia and Ecuador has been closed, limiting people's movements. We know that what Venezuelans have been doing up to now is really moving from Venezuela to Colombia—there are still one million in Colombia—and moving down towards Peru.
If you look at the map, Peru is rather south, compared with Venezuela. By closing the border between Ecuador and Colombia, you limit the capacity of people to find safety, but also to find livelihood opportunities, access to health care, access to education for their children and so on.
That was justified, I understand, because of the rise in xenophobic attitudes of the hosting communities in Ecuador, who were competing for the same resources as the newly arrived Venezuelans.
Without support, we will see more and more of those borders being closed.