I think the vast majority of people have returned to their communities, but not all of them have returned to their homes. After being detained in these IDP camps, most of them have gone back now. However, there are still major problems because they don't have homes. A lot of these people are still living in temporary accommodation, quite like tent accommodation. There is a high military presence in a lot of these communities, which has caused some problems, particularly because a lot of these households are now headed by women.
Human Rights Watch has been doing a bit of documentation around cases of sexual assault, and also around the fact that, in some cases, women are trading sex in order to obtain some protection, sometimes from local members of the security forces and the military, because they're facing sexual abuse not only from the security forces, but also from other people in their own community.
So there are certainly a lot of issues around vulnerability, lack of protection and really, again, still around a real lack of humanitarian access and space to afford the right kinds of protections to these communities.