Thank you, Chair, I fully understand.
Ms. Tintori, you're a brave woman. Your husband is a very brave man to turn down exile and to stay there, and be a symbol of hope for those who are protesting for a better Venezuela. We certainly hope for the best outcome for you, your children, and your husband.
Mr. Genser, it's good to see you again and thank you for your good work.
I don't know how my colleagues feel when we hear this testimony like this where the judiciary, the legislature, the police, and the military have slid so far into impunity and corruption. It's hard to even frame a question based on western democratic values that we try to live by.
That said, let me ask right now, with your husband and many other political prisoners in prison, are there some leaders who are still free, who continue to try and organize the protests? I understand that the last that we're aware of were in September, so that they can keep the issue in the forefront of peoples' minds in Venezuela. Although international pressure helps and we will participate, really the groundswell of ordinary Venezuelans makes a bigger difference.
Is the movement still strong?