I can't speak specifically to our program in Iraq in relation to Yazidis, because many of those elements are technical, and I hope you'll understand.
Certainly as far as the question of being afraid is concerned, I referred to that earlier and I would disaggregate the situation of IDPs versus the refugee population, because, again, when it's a refugee situation, we have the convention and our abilities are a bit stronger. To be quite honest, we count on countries like the United States and Canada, our supporters, our generous supporters, to also back us up when we talk, and they do, to their credit. They will do interventions with governments directly as a group and such.
But in terms of the situations in camps in the region, I'm a bit concerned about the.... Again, I'd love to have more details because I hear this sort of generic talk that “we're afraid” and such, and sometimes we say there are camps and technically there are actually no camps, for example, in some places. I know that one of the challenges we've had is that, for example, in Turkey we've been trying to sort out with the Yazidi population and the Turkish officials ways that they can have better levels of assistance. We have situations where they'll register with us, but they haven't registered with the Turkish officials, and again, registration with the Turkish officials will get the assistance. But they don't want to move from the location they're in and the Turkish officials are also.... I don't want to be critical of the Turkish officials because they're hosting 2.8 million refugees—2.8 million Syrians, and many others as well. They've been incredibly generous. But sometimes it's just navigating these bridges of, if we could only get the Turkish officials to be there, or the Yazidi community to be willing to leave one location, because they want to be together as a group, so that they could properly register so we could get the assistance, we could get the information, so we could make the referrals.
Sometimes it's as operational as that.