Yes, if I may.
We are talking about research and data, but I would like to say that the justice system in Colombia cannot be trusted. The attorney general is a close friend of the president. It has been demonstrated that he is incapable of shedding any light on the false statements and the massacres. In this year so far, there have been 27 massacres in the country. In Colombia, the justice system has no credibility, because it is allied with the government.
As I told you, they have said that the government is making efforts to improve the situation. We know the government's response. The former leader of the party, Álvaro Uribe, wrote on Twitter that the police and the army should shoot people. After he wrote that, the police did indeed shoot people. I don't trust the Colombian government when it comes to justice, because there is no evidence that justice is being done.
The report of the Universidad de las Américas Puebla states that Colombia is the country with the highest rate of impunity. Human rights situations are not taken seriously. Let's take the situation of women as an example. In one instance, a woman teacher was abducted by police officers. The police raped her, impaled her and cut her into pieces. The police did this simply because she was opposed to the reform and had demonstrated with other teachers.
We know that the truth about cases like that will not be known. In Colombia, it can take 20 years. Only after the International Criminal Court or the Inter-American Court of Human Rights issues a verdict does the government recognize such crimes.