Yes, and actually I've been interviewed by quite a few journalists about that.
It's accidental sometimes and it is quite common, of course, not only in the camps but also in the villages. It is very hot and dry, and people live in wood or bamboo houses, and in the camp, of course, they are in bamboo shelters, which have very little fire prevention. Especially when the wind is blowing it can lead to a lot of destruction.
I have to mention just one more thing which I believe may not have been made clear. Actually, I have a team of researchers. In addition to visiting the camps, I have a team of researchers, Rohingya and Bangladeshi researchers, and they are based at the border with northern Rakhine State. They have daily contact by phone with a number of sources there. We actually have a special [Inaudible—Editor] to focus, even though we don't have direct access. We document as credibly as possible also the situation in northern Rakhine. That's why I made the distinction in my presentation, because that situation is often ignored. You talk about the fires, and there have been several fires there as well, recently destroying an entire market. I just wanted to mention that.
I mean perhaps luckily, [Inaudible—Editor] the district camps will receive some support from international agencies and the government to rebuild the shelters. Of course, people will have lost whatever belongings they had. When a fire happens in villages in northern Rakhine, often there is no assistance or support at all, and the villages have to rebuild everything by themselves.