I think if you look at some of the land title disputes in the rural parts of Honduras, clearly, those are important drivers. A number of deaths have been attributed to tensions over access to land and ownership of land. Honduras has come a long way, but there are still some dominant families, large landholders and such, who are resisting changes to their situation. Sometimes access to land causes very tense debate in the country and we still see that playing out; that's an important element of it.
The second part, in terms of media, is that sadly those who venture into subjects like corruption or who address issues of police corruption and drug trafficking can be at some risk personally if they undertake those sorts of reports. We've seen that happen in the case of Honduras. Mexico is another example of how that kind of journalism is risky. Sadly, we're seeing that in Honduras.
Of even more concern is how little conviction and follow-up we've been able to confirm through actual charges for some of these cases. That undermines freedom of the press, of course, and the liberty to write what should be written.