Thank you very much.
As you've mentioned, the conflict has certainly highlighted even more the gender-based violence, violence against women, in South Sudan. But even before the conflict, this was a phenomenon that was culturally entrenched in the culture of South Sudan.
For quite some time now, through our investments in improving access to health care for women, we've been working on helping victims—women who have been victims of gender-based violence—through appropriate health care. We've also been working for quite some time on family planning to give women rights over their own health, their own sexual reproduction. We've also, through our investments in agriculture, been working with communities and with families on a day-to-day basis on informing what are women's rights, in the communities and in the family. We work with community members, and the husbands and family members, as well.
This is work that's been going on for quite some time and that will continue to be ongoing. If anything, we'll be focusing even more on these areas.