I don't know how widely that is known in the situation. Obviously quite a few civil society organizations have been addressing this issue and have certainly also filed briefs on the issue. Women's Initiatives For Gender Justice, which is an international organization based in The Hague, represents thousands of grassroots women. They actually filed on this specific issue.
Without talking about the prosecutorial strategy around the Lubanga case, I will say that we submitted our filing several weeks ago on the Lubanga case. We said that perhaps the judges could think about broader definitions under a reparations order. If indeed we're using the resources of the trust fund for victims to complement a court order, and it's a collective order in nature, you could perhaps include other types of harm suffered by the victims in this case to include sexual violence on a reparations order. We'll have to see. It's pending. We don't have a decision yet from chamber. We'll have to see how “reparations” is defined.
It's a very good question.