I can't comment on those because I wasn't part of the methodology, but I tend to give the UN and such organizations a great deal of deference in terms of their reporting and their methodologies. So I would not, sort of a priori, dismiss those in any sense.
What I also note in the UN reports is that the treatment is mostly about the conduct of the state. The treatment of business responsibility is quite thin in those reports. I think that will, with future reports, evolve and there will be more analysis by UN agencies of these now that the UN guiding principles have been adopted and there is more attention on these issues.
Certainly the one report that everyone here will be familiar with is the Human Rights Watch report about the mining sector in Eritrea. I have respect for Human Rights Watch as an organization and certainly read the report attentively and used some of the concerns there to frame my own areas of inquiry. Because their specific allegations dated back to 2009, I was not able to corroborate them or not. I think I'm quite open about that in the report and say that for those past factual issues there need to be grievance mechanisms that are credible and effective, and that those can be addressed in an appropriate manner.