Thank you for your question.
Yes, most certainly, I think it's important to notice that we've had three years of this war now. In these three years, we've pursued a particular diplomatic approach internationally, which is quiet diplomacy and not confronting the government—really, a policy of appeasement.
It's important to ask what that policy has produced. It has produced 600,000 casualties in Tigray and it has plunged Ethiopia further down into chaos. I think that at this point, it's fair enough—we have enough evidence—to conclude that the diplomatic approach has not succeeded, and there's no reason to think that it will succeed.
Not calling a spade a spade has only emboldened the Ethiopian government. They're continuing to make these genocidal statements in public. I think it's an indication that, really, they have understood that the international community has decided not to confront Ethiopia regardless of what it does, and I think that's very dangerous. I think that getting a genocide declaration out in public will really put pressure on other international actors. It will put pressure on those who are fuelling the war by providing weapons, countries like the UAE, Turkey—