Well, maybe I'll answer, and if Jeff wants to add something, he can. Obviously, impunity is the major challenge in Honduras, seeing as they have a very low conviction rate in the courts. Then again, if others can influence decisions in a certain way, they will try to, and they seem to be quite successful at doing that. So if you're going to take crime with impunity, that generates more crime and more confidence that you won't be caught and convicted, and it becomes a bit of a spiral downwards, and that's what we're seeing.
But to be fair to Honduras, that's not unique to the country. That's very common right now in a number of countries in Central America and in South America, but I would say it's particularly acute in Honduras.
In terms of the environment, we've touched on it. There is one stream of what we'd call human rights violations in relation to individuals, for example, who might be involved in journalism or political parties or land seizure or land reform movements. Those are on one track of human rights violations.
Then speaking of purely violence, if you will, I think the main drivers there are organized crime and its role, drug trafficking, and the mara gangs that I mentioned.
The maras actually go back to Los Angeles, primarily to the outflow of Central Americans to Los Angeles. These people with criminal backgrounds being expelled by the United States have gone back to settle in Honduras, and they've brought the gang structure back. Now you're into a second generation of young people who are initiated into these gang cultures, which are very hard to penetrate. They're hard to convict; they control sections of cities, and they control the prisons. It's a very dangerous environment, and that, I think, is another important factor besides the whole drug trafficking environment.
Finally, as I may have also mentioned, during the coup d'état period, the police and armed forces became distracted by demonstrations and street protests and such, and other parts of the country were kind of opened up to traffickers, so suddenly they had free rein to increase their transit of drugs through Honduras, and that has had a debilitating effect on the society.