Thank you very much, and thank you, all of you, for your testimony this afternoon.
I have a question for Mr. Garcia Monroy. I had the pleasure and honour of visiting Guatemala in the summer and witnessed a very difficult situation, but also a very hopeful situation. What brought hope to me was the formation of efforts—I won't call it organization—and initiatives such as the International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala.
Other parliamentarians and I, as well as the chair, were on that trip. We saw a common thread running through the problems impacting Guatemala's democracy and its lack of economic development, which is not just the issue of corruption but the lack of impunity for corruption. The creation of the commission to deal with that problem is a very interesting development.
I would like to ask you in your work as a youth activist what you sense of this development. I know there was a great deal of hope among the media there and among human rights activists and others, but what do you feel about this development?
Also, could the witnesses who spoke about Honduras speak and the creation of a similar commission in that country, discuss whether or not that has created a sense of hope and a real, potentially positive direction going forward, when it comes to dealing with problems of impunity?