Obviously armed conflict places children in particularly vulnerable situations in which they no longer have access to school or health care, in which income-generating activities are therefore not as available to them and their families and they are forced into particularly dangerous and hazardous forms of child labour, maybe being recruited by armed groups, but also into support services to those armed groups, such as portering and supplying child sexual exploitation. It is quite difficult to then engage in supply chains, and you'll see only a very few companies that have a presence in particularly volatile situations such as those. Some of them are, for example, extractive companies.
This is why you have an initiative such as the voluntary principles on security and human rights, which looks to engage public and private security providers on human rights, thus looking at engaging governments and the armed forces as well as the private sector security providers. What we're seeing is that companies are taking the lead in providing human and child rights-based training to the governments. They're actually leading the way. I think that's a promising step.