Certainly on the extractive industry side we did see evidence of large marble and other extractive locations, mining locations, being operated by members of the Rajapaksa family. The notion that this was an open process where there could be competing bids and all that sort of stuff didn't strike us as very likely under the circumstance.
We did receive testimony about the way in which some security forces were dealing with the many widows who continue to live in the north. While they take the public position that they are there to protect everybody, there are, sadly, incidents reported of members of various organizations knocking on widows' doors in the middle of the night with intentions that none of us around this table would view as necessarily honourable.
That mix of intimidation, and lack of any compassion with respect to their need for clarity about what happened to their husbands or children, combined produces a significant level of oppression. You will have seen, as we all have seen, those who gathered in great numbers around the British Prime Minister when he was in that part of the world holding up pictures of their loved ones and beseeching him to somehow be helpful in coming to terms with this terrible gap in their lives.
So that struck us from various briefings we received from people on the ground, including the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, as a very serious problem. Many of the displaced persons with whom we met were in fact these various widows who were living in a circumstance that was completely unmanageable. They were very brave about it and very determined, but their circumstance was in fact quite desperate.