Yes, the incident you're referring to developed in the middle of December. There's a constitutional wing of the Supreme Court that's composed of five Supreme Court justices. A number of laws, including the law on model cities, had not been passed, and the government tried to push through.... As part of its efforts to clean up the national police force, it was working to pass a law that would have helped it vet police officers and get rid of officers who did not pass that vetting. As part of the standard legislative procedure, after that law was passed in the National Congress, it had to pass through the constitutional wing of the Supreme Court. That wing did not give the law its nod of approval.
As a result of that, the government obviously was not pleased that part of its legislative agenda to try to get rid of corruption in the police force didn't pass. That led to its dismissal of four of the five judges. As Mr. Reeder has referred to, it's part of an institutional struggle that's going on in Honduras, where we have a Supreme Court and a congress allied with the executive. It's something that we are following very closely, it's something that continues to play out in Honduras at this time, and it's something that we continue to discuss with other key donors in the Group of Sixteen.