Well, when the Yazidis on August 3 were put on the road and, based on their religious identity, if they were Yazidi men they were killed and the children were taken into the training camps and the women were enslaved, I think it's unfair that the world would not look into the question of identity. I think it's important that we understand that everyone is suffering in the region. Yes, there's a big tragedy in the region, a big humanitarian crisis; but also religion is a big factor. ISIS is a Sunni group that has used the radical Sunni interpretations of Islam, and it's committing crimes against people who oppose its ideology. On the top of that list come the Yazidis, the Christians, the Shabaks and other minorities, and the Sabians.
It will be unfair, I think, for any country to not take that into consideration. At the same time, I believe in human equality, yet in this particular case, if we are trying to prioritize the process, I would also look into what group they are from, but at the same time at what kinds of victims they areāfor example, people such as Nadia, people who are orphans, people who lost a husband. The identification, I think, also should be based on what they have witnessed.