Thank you very much for this question, because it allows me to go back to the global resettlement criteria, which are at the core of our program.
We are looking at whether the person has the capacity and the ability and is receiving the services to survive in the first country of asylum, or in his or her own country when we're talking about internally displaced people. We have identified certain categories of people who are at greater risk of not being able to survive in exile. These are rape victims, torture survivors, people who are at risk of being detained and sent back to their country of origin where they may be at risk of persecution, children at risk, and women at risk. For example, there could be a widow with several children, who will have difficulty surviving economically and who may be forced to resort to survival sex as a way to feed her children.
The categories are very limited, and it's on this basis, and not on the basis of, as you rightly mentioned, sex, religion, ethnic origin, or being a linguistic minority that we look at vulnerabilities. It's the same when we are looking at complaints that we receive about our own staff or our partner staff discriminating against a certain person.