The commission does not rank countries per se. There is, however, what's called chapter 4 of our annual report, in which countries that face severe challenges as defined in the rules of procedure of the commission with regard to human rights will be treated separately. Honduras has been, to use the jargon of the Inter-American system, in chapter 4 since the 2009 coup.
The overall conclusions of your subcommittee's report in 2015, which I've had a chance to review, are quite similar to the conclusions of the Inter-American Commission in a report that was based on a visit at the end of 2014 and on continued research throughout 2015, approved in December 2015 and issued in February 2016.
I would say that the situation has been stagnant, that in the past year or two, since the data points incorporated and analyzed in your early 2015 report, there has not been significant change, except insofar as this case involving Berta Cáceres and other people in COPINH, the organization with which she works, is concerned.
This case demonstrates that despite the pressure, despite international concern, people who are very high-profile—Beta Cáceres was a very high-profile, leading, brilliant human rights defender. The fact that they were unable to protect her and others from her community and other rights activists indicates that progress is not occurring, that we may be stagnant, we may be on a downward slope. Those I would say are the possibilities.