Absolutely there is a role.
There is a small-scale attempt at this. There is a centre in Baidoa. Baidoa is a southern city. The UN's demobilization, disarmament, and reintegration, DDR, program has built a centre in which they're trying to.... There are kids who might have joined al Shabaab, have become disillusioned, and then come back. There is a training centre. It's really limited. When I was there, they had about 16 kids.
There is a process whereby the UNSOM, the UN mission in Somalia, is trying to create communication strategies to reduce the number of kids who become attracted to al Shabaab, and they're consulting the community on this. I know that there was an attempt to open another centre in Kismayo, which is another port city in the south. I think they started building it, but I don't know whether it's open yet.
UNICEF and the UN are trying, but there is absolutely a need to support that effort and to broaden it. Not too many people can travel by road in the country, but now that there are federal member states and these federal member states have interim capital cities, there are several centres that can now be utilized; it's not as though everything is in Mogadishu. Now, with the federalism process being implemented, there is an opportunity to maybe establish several centres in these various regions, and yes, there is a role for the international community and the UN to build it up.