Absolutely. That is the key. I must emphasize that I cannot see a better way to handle the situation without monitoring and sending in various international groups—humanitarian groups, aid groups, monitoring groups, human rights groups—from the United Nations and individual countries. It must be a significant undertaking. If one or two UN officials go to one or two cities and come back, it's not going to work. It has to be persistent. They have to hit the ground. They have to have a regular office, and it has to be systematic, because the problem is systematic. It is widespread; it is not a small thing. I can assure you, sitting here and testifying, that it is very significant and that this has to be coordinated by the international community, just as the Burmese ethnic cleansing is coordinated.
On June 19th, 2012. See this statement in context.