It's a lot of what Madame St-Pierre has said. There is some duplication.
About a year and a half ago, we had a woman speak to us who represented a local church in the eastern Congo. She provided very clear evidence that their community initiatives to address social violence, and to ensure that it doesn't flare up in the community, were actually quite effective. She was concerned that NGOs, the foreign NGOs that were coming into the region, had set up some programs with a lot of money. They were operating on no funds in this church-based organization, so they were essentially being eclipsed by the efforts of these NGOs with which they hadn't really had any communication and that hadn't consulted them. They were a little miffed about that.
In my own work on gender and the extractives, I had known that she had done some field work on her own in the region about this issue. But she was reluctant to share it with anybody outside of the DRC. she wanted to control that data because it had been misappropriated in the past.
Also, again, to look at this issue of representation, the way this issue of sexual violence has been portrayed in the media and in Hollywood, and at all levels, has really infantilized African women. They don't want to be caught up in that. They want to have agency and power over their own information and how they're portrayed. So there's this kind of growing skepticism, I think, and a reluctance to share information and to be held captive and hostage to these kinds of games of representation that are going on.