Yes. There are some members of the military who are discontented, who feel ashamed. Malnutrition and hunger have reached the military headquarters, and the military, as you know, are also human beings. They happen to eat. They get thirsty. They have families.
This year in January they murdered an inspector in the so-called massacre of El Junquito, a small community where there had been a rebellion. Then, by March, a captain was captured who had headed an assault, an attack, against a military headquarters in Venezuela. General Rodriguez Torres is now also detained. He was one member of the military group that supported the revolution. Then there was a so-called rebellion this year in May with the commanders of that so-called rebellion, the Ayala battalion.
Recently there was another act of violence with members of the military under a situation of rebellion. As Ambassador Arria was telling us, the armed forces and the institutional reserve of the armed forces have to necessarily play an important role in the establishment of the rule of law in Venezuela.