That may be one area where Canada can also make an important contribution.
You talk about displacement camps. I would talk more about the refugee camps, because there aren't really...or maybe that's what you meant.
Human Rights Watch did some research in the refugee camps in Tanzania, which is a country that is hosting the largest number of Burundians. We found not only that there were women and girls there who had been raped in Burundi and been victims of other forms of abuse in Burundi, but separately from that, had been victims of some of those same abuses in Tanzania, in exile.
That is not in a political context anymore, but as you rightly said, displaced people, refugees, are very vulnerable, especially in huge refugee camps. There's inadequate support. There's inadequate response from the Tanzanians, even from the people who are running the camps. The women don't always know where to go to get help. In some instances, they did report these cases to the Tanzanians. Some of them said there were investigations and people arrested, but of course this did not occur in all cases.
Some of the cases of rape, for example, that were reported in the camps were committed by other refugees. It's Burundians against Burundians. But others were done by the local population, by Tanzanians. This happens, for example, when women go out of the camp to try to sell things or go to the markets. For sure, women and children have suffered enormously, and are still suffering. I think for those who were lucky enough to be able to escape from Burundi, there's definitely more support that could be brought to them.