Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for the critically important work you do in the countries around South Sudan.
I'd like to ask for your thoughts and insight on something that committees of the House of Commons have examined in a variety of ways over the past couple of years relating to the status within UNHCR operating protocols with regard to internally displaced people. We've seen quite an emotional discussion back and forth with regard to the situation of the Yazidi IDPs in northern Iraq.
Given the 1.7 million externally displaced civilian population driven out of South Sudan by a variety of circumstances and the violence, given that there are even more internally displaced—1.9 million, so almost two million, by your numbers—are there camps? You mentioned the various NGOs operating at great risk within South Sudan.
Is it time for the United Nations, given the nature of conflicts in this century, to review operating procedures and protocols with regard to the exceptionally large number of internally displaced people?
Also, given the famine, there's even another dimension to this horror. Do you believe it's time for the UNHCR to examine its policy on internally displaced people in crisis?