Thank you.
I would simply be echoing the thoughts of my two colleagues when I say this. It's a whole heap of trouble. It's hard to know where to start or end at this point.
I visited South Sudan in January 2012, some six months after it declared independence. As my colleague Professor Cotler stated, upon leaving there was a sense of hope and faith that something strong could be built in this country. It is saddening to see what is happening.
In one of the visits I had—I guess it touches on the subject of child soldiers—we visited a police training centre in Juba. I noticed that the cadets were very young. These were soldiers who were transitioning or being trained to be policemen. I asked whether any transitional training was going on for these young men who had just come from a war and who are now being put in a civilian peacekeeping situation. Had there been any therapy, any transitional program, available to them to make that mental leap, because being a soldier is quite different from being a peace officer? Now we hear that child soldiers are again being recruited. I'm concerned. My concern is about what that generation brings to the country and to the community, being brought up, for lack of a better way of putting it, as killers as opposed to children, students, and givers to the community.
In your presentation I think you said that 90% of the soldiers—