As for MONUSCO's capabilities, it can be said that there have been significant improvements in security, particularly since offices, battalions and mobile groups have been going around to the villages. That has been the case for a year and a half or two years. People acknowledge that.
It's not the MONUSCO military personnel who deal with the sexual violence: it's the human rights office with which Canada has a contractual relationship. That group focuses solely on the most horrific incidents, the mass rapes involving 200 or 300 individuals, for example. It documents those cases but does not provide any legal follow-up. The local military legal authorities do that, using evidence gathered by the MONUSCO people. The legal, military and civilian police don't yet have the necessary capability to conduct those investigations. A number of the programs that I mentioned to you are designed to increase the capability of the judicial and military police.