At the end of your presentation, you said that in your Nairobi mission, which serves a dozen countries in Africa—I think that's a lot—7,000 applications are still waiting their turn. A lawyer who came to testify last week, if I remember correctly, told us that the process was very long and that an individual had to wait practically 48 months to go through the whole bureaucratic maze.
But then we were given the example of the mission in Damascus, which serves fewer countries, but is able to process some applications more quickly.
Isn't the problem the lack of means, resources and funding? If we added those elements to the mission in Nairobi, for example, we could be more optimistic about processing more applications and doing so faster. We would allow more applicants to be heard and received.