Thank you.
In terms of what other countries can do, I think the current approach of the United States, which is to continue to say...[Technical difficulty--Editor].
I think that while efforts have been made by the United States and other governments to pressure the Honduran government to respect the rule of law and to increase prosecutorial capacity and clean up the police, those have been overwhelming failures so far. So I think because there's no political will to reform these procedures under the current government—the Lobo administration, the executive branch, the congress, and now with the supreme court under their control—we cannot solve this by helping this government clean itself up. I think the only path here is to cut police and military immediately and to publicly denounce the corrupt government led by Pepe Lobo and Juan Orlando Hernandez.
I think we have to demand immediate protection of all those human rights defenders who've received threats, and I certainly think we should not be cooperating with this government, which has shown over and over again that it doesn't have the political will to clean itself up. In fact, many of these figures are profiting from the very problem.