Yes, when we look at that figure from 75,000 to 120,000 members of private security, that means they are at the disposal of the Honduran state to ensure security in the country. So for the most part, the people in charge of these individual security members are former members of the military who were responsible for human rights violations in the past, or who are current members of the military who are perpetrating them now. So these are the security forces that are arresting people. I have the example of the Bajo Aguán region. There are the forces, and we're not just talking about the police and the military, but we also have the peasants who are making their demands for land reform, and there is this other military force of private security force members, so there's a combined effect. There's public security, there's the military, and there's the private security forces that work together. For us, that creates a very dangerous situation, because, be it national or international, those private security forces are operating in the country. But I would only like to refer to national private security forces because they are very dangerous, and there is no control or record, really, that can guarantee who it is, where they come from, who these people are within the private security force. This creates a high-risk situation that leads to the impunity that I mentioned earlier, because it's very difficult to investigate and find, even, a member of a private security force who committed a crime.
For example, in the Bajo Aguán region, three members of private security forces from one of the businessmen in the area, raped a young woman. There was no way of finding out who was responsible for that rape. The private security force members wear a uniform, but there's no way of knowing who they are because they don't have their identity papers, and that can lead to all types of violations and atrocities. That is a constant concern for us because, on the one hand, they generate fear and terror, and furthermore we have to be very, very careful because they work with the military and the police in Honduras.