Yes. It's an excellent question. From our observations and documentation, it's very clear to us at this point that the Myanmar state security forces, and to a certain extent the civilian government, are using the context of counterinsurgency to, as my colleague said, either drive the Rohingya out of Rakhine State or destroy segments of the population. The introduction of Rohingya militancy has really been a context that the authorities have seized on in a very brutal way.
In terms of support in Myanmar, certainly in Rakhine State the environment is extremely hostile right now, and we have documented civilian perpetrators. The state security forces have armed civilians in Rakhine State—Buddhist civilians, non-Muslim civilians—who have then subsequently inflicted lethal force and killed masses of people.
In the wider context of Myanmar, there are voices of hope. Some segments of Myanmar civil society have been outspoken to a certain extent on this, but there is, of course, a very deep level of discrimination from people in Myanmar. It should be noted that most of the people with the most vehement opinions about the Rohingya in Myanmar have actually never met or spent any time with Rohingya people.