There are two things.
First, with regard to whether the Taliban are listening or not, I think they will listen, and I will elaborate on that. With regard to the Hazara genocide recognition as a whole for humankind, I think the atrocity is just ongoing, and it needs to be recognized at an international level. That is what our community in Canada and elsewhere wants to happen.
In terms of listening.... Since the last attack that we had last year on our education centre back in Kabul where 57 girls, mainly under 19 years old, were killed, unfortunately, we actually had a “Stop Hazara Genocide” campaign. We had demonstrations across the globe in 130 cities and in more than 50 or 60 countries. We then had #StopHazaraGenocide, which was retweeted more than 15 million times on Twitter. Actually, when we were back in contact in Afghanistan, we realized that the Taliban were actually taking things seriously. Over the last year, fortunately, we haven't had any attacks on this kind of a scale, but they changed their strategy. Now there is ongoing genocide in terms of forced displacement and individual targeting, not directly targeting their schools or mosques.
Unfortunately, just recently—a week ago—a bomb was exploded in one of the Hazara mosques in northern Afghanistan, and 30 people were killed. I mentioned this in my statement.
This is something that I can see is important for them, because at the end of the day, they are actually wanting to.... The international community is somehow having traction with them at some level. I think that this will have an impact.