Yes, there are a number of ways.
For those human rights lawyers who have had their licences stripped from them—and there are about three or four who I can name—we can put pressure to have their licence to practice put back in effect.
We can push the Vietnamese government on legal reform, for example, legal proceedings. Lawyers sometimes are given a day's notice of the trial. Sometimes it's only half a day's notice. You cannot prepare for a trial if you are only given a day or half a day. We can push them for legal reform in the sense that lawyers should be granted access to their clients while the clients are being detained. It's very common in Vietnam that these lawyers are denied access to their clients. So legal reform is the second way.
The first one is to make sure that these people get the protection they need, and for those who have had their licences taken away, these should be reinstituted. Legal reform for change is the second approach.