That's a good question. I think I have to be a little vague in my answer in the following respect. I think we have a very active civil society in Iran on many fronts. There are very few who have identified themselves as human rights organizations in an organized form. Ms. Ebadi's is one of the few. With her profile as a Nobel laureate, she has had a certain immunity, as well as being a target for criticism. But I think there is also a certain amount of protection from that international profile.
She has been tireless in expanding her own concerns in the area of children's rights, which is where she began to embroil her concerns about human rights generally, taking up the cases of the Baha’is, for instance, as well as numerous other cases of people coming under attack and arrest by the government.
I think there's a fairly high degree of awareness, particularly in the political class. I also have to say that because we are not allowed into the country, we tend to have a very Tehran-centric view of things. On the extent to which the same kinds of civil society activities, particularly with a human rights focus, exist in other parts of the country, the Kurdish area probably has the highest profile. We know there's activism there, but wherever you're dealing with a situation of an ethnic minority--particularly an ethnic minority like the Kurds that have been connected at various times with separatist movements and so forth--the security rationale for suppression is extremely high.
I'm not sure what I could add to that. Because we're not able to get in, we depend a lot on reports we get from individuals inside the country via the Internet, telephone, and other modes of communication.