Thank you.
In a changing world or a changing environment in any country that's gone through this type of upheaval, a healthy judiciary is key.
As an anecdote, I went to Kenya. I think it was the year before last. It was the second trip I made. In the first trip, we spoke with the chief justice, who had committed that within the year leading up to the elections to come, he would clean up the judiciary to the point where people would have faith in it, enough faith to use that process as opposed to the violence that occurred in the elections prior to that.
When we went back that year, he had actually managed to instill that faith through re-interviewing many of the judges and dismissing a significant number of them. This interview process was not done internally. Judges were brought in from other countries, from African nations, to make up that tribunal.
I know from my colleagues' questions that the judiciary there is not in a healthy state. Is there any kind of work being done to strengthen the judiciary and to rebuild or build faith in the process of law as an alternative to other means of retribution?