First, if you talk about the overall solution in Iraq, it's becoming a proxy war now. The conflict needs to be depoliticized. We need to get rid of ISIS as soon as possible. There is the long-term solution and the short-term solution. I think we need to get on ISIS as soon as possible to get rid of them and establish safe communities for people to go back. At the same time, we need to provide people of vulnerable communities with some sort of guarantee that this will not happen again. If you ask Yazidis or Christians, will you go back to your areas, they will tell you they will not go back unless there is international protection. They are saying that because in many cases those are their neighbours, who are basically in the next village, next door, and they aligned themselves with ISIS when they came, so there's a lot of mistrust in the community.
You have to build peace to bring people back. To establish peace, you have to have justice. That's why we are asking for the ICC to open this case to look into the crimes and to bring the perpetrators to justice. I think I would prefer an approach like Germany's. It was a very quick thing. A decision was made by the German government, actually it was made by the state, not even by the federal government, and then the approval was received from the federal government. They created a committee, the committee went to Iraq and did the interviews very quickly in a couple of months and then we had 1,100 women come to Germany very quickly. I think it's important that we raise all these numbers to bring in refugees, but at the same time I would prefer a targeted program.