Absolutely. We have our office in a place called Pamplona. It's on the route of the caminantes. It's a hill town not far from the border. It's one and a half hours by car. As an example, there were four albergues where caminantes and Venezuelans were allowed to stay overnight. They got food. It was an initiative by the local civil society.
There was so much backlash during the pandemic against providing these services that all four albergues were forced to close. When we tried to open an alternative spot, the whole community rioted. There were riot police. This was three or four weeks ago, when I was there with my team.
COVID is interfering tremendously with our ability to provide services to those groups. It has escalated in the last month because of the pandemic, because of the fear people have. There is a xenophobic narrative that's been going on already in the last four or five years. It preceded the pandemic.