We saw two things in that respect. We certainly saw the notion of displaced persons being held in camps for long periods of time, not being allowed to go back to what was their family land or farm or their land adjacent to the fishery. Secondly, the Indian government had invested in some public housing to be built in the north, but in order to get access to that the authorities were demanding that the locals sign away any rights they might have to their own land or farm in order to be put on a waiting list for a construction process that was many thousands of units behind what was necessary to meet the need.
We came away from this with the conclusion that this is not serious. Yes, the Sri Lankan government is investing in the central infrastructure—roads, highways, hospitals—but access to them or the ownership of the critical parts of the turf associated with them was not being transferred back to the Tamil population in any way, shape, or form, whatever they wanted to pay for it.