—and just a couple of things occurred to me that I wanted to get sorted out.
Eritrea has a couple of the cleavages that you tend to find in situations where there are widespread human rights abuses.
One is that there is a number of ethnic groups, according to what I have here in front of me: Tigrinya, 55% of the population; Tigre, 30%; Saho, 4%; and some smaller ones, such as Afar and so on.
The country also has religious cleavages. There's a Muslim population and a Christian population, and I gather the party structure during the revolutionary period was largely split on these lines.
Is there any kind of work that has been done by the folks at the UN who keep track of refugees to determine what the nature of the refugee population is, that is, who are the people who are being oppressed? Is it based on religious lines? Is it based on nationality, on tribal considerations...? Is it just simply people who the regime doesn't like, people who are opposed to the current president? What kind of grouping would we see among those who are being oppressed and being driven out of their country?