I think this is an area of enormous concern. As many of you know, Dr. Mukwege, who is the director of Panzi Hospital, is truly the hero at the forefront of the issue of sexual violence in DRC and has dedicated his life to helping women there. He did face an assassination attempt recently, and despite that has returned to Congo to continue his work.
I think it's a reflection of a deeper problem relating to human rights and DRC. While you have some heroes who undertake work with complete disregard for their personal safety, this is simply not a safe situation for people to work in. What I think it relates to is the broader issue of the fact that peace and stability must be a foundation for other efforts.
I've seen clinics and schools built and I've returned months later to find them rubble, or washed away, or abandoned because of a recent attack. I think that in order for true progress to occur in Congo, we need to think about how to create a relatively sustained peace where people like Dr. Mukwege can undertake their work knowing they'll wake up the next day and have the ability to continue.
I think, frankly, it probably reflects to some extent a disregard for human rights and certain wider political structures.