Yes, I've looked at that issue. I was one of the examiners on a doctoral dissertation that was examining precisely that, and whether the humanitarian assistance being provided to the Yazidis in Iraqi Kurdistan was culturally appropriate to their specific circumstances and backgrounds. That research and field work were done just last year. It uncovered that at the beginning, those women were treated very badly, which was the standard modus operandi of the Yazidi community. It's a very insular community. It's xenophobic towards others. You're not allowed to convert into Yazidism or out of it, and then these women were non-entities after something like that happened.
However, there were so many who suffered this fate, that the community, just to survive, made a conscious effort to change its norms. Many of the Yazidi peers and elders came forward to say, “Look, this has to change. These are our daughters, the women of our community. We must take them back in.” They're working really hard to get over that.
The situation, I believe, is much improved, although I wouldn't necessarily suggest it's settled yet.