The area we're working in is Northern Bahr el Ghazal. A lot of the international NGOs still have some focus, but they've moved off to the areas of conflict, which are typically the Upper Nile and Equatoria. What becomes really important in terms of the human resource development of the South Sudanese is actually the training of the South Sudanese.
MSF is helping to run a hospital. There are certain clinics that some international NGOs are running. In South Sudan, it is not like you can hop on a bus or train and get to the hospital. The South Sudanese have to walk—sometimes for hours, sometimes for days—to these areas. In terms of having children, the mortality of those children, and decreasing that mortality, what is incredibly important, obviously, is training folks to help the mothers have children at their own house.
It's incredibly important, and it's incredibly important to keep that kind of program going over time. You don't just train people and then leave them alone. You train them. Then you come back and see how they're doing. You help to monitor them. It's not just a six-month process or a nine-month training course. You have to consistently be there over a period of years as they get better and better at it.