Right. This is an extremely complicated issue. The first group of people who were displaced by violence in June 2012 have been sort of accepted by the government. The government actually organized their transfer to those camps. Then there was a second wave of violence, as you know, in October 2012, and some of the people came from the south of Rakhine state, where there was also violence, to Sittwe. Initially, the authorities did not want to recognize them or let them even stay there because they wanted them to return to the area and set up a camp near their place rather than in Sittwe. But in the end, I understand that these people have been recognized and now receive food assistance from the WFP, but through the government.
The problem is a third category of people, who are referred to in Rakhine state either as “economic IDPs” or “livelihood IDPs”, according to which organization one talks to. These people were not displaced by the violence, but by their lack of access to a livelihood in the villages. Since they can't move, they can't go to markets and can't find work outside, and thus have decided to sell their houses, leave their villages, and go to the internally displaced camps to try to get assistance there because they can't otherwise survive. That's an ongoing process. These are the main problems nowadays. The authorities do not want to recognize these people. They want them to go back to where they came from, to their villages, not to start adding to the the numbers of people in the camps grow.
The situation is actually very complex there. They have received a donation so far—that's all.