Well, let me tell you what we know and let me tell you what we don't know.
In the case of those in the re-education camps, they are not allowed to speak Ukrainian. If they had a phone, the phone was taken. In many cases, for those boys over the age of 13, we were seeing evidence of military training. In the case of one camp in Chechnya called Mountain Key, children were learning how to use firearms and operate military vehicles.
For the younger children, there is exposure to Russian folk songs, military history and visits to major battlefields. Among the children who have returned, the 300 mentioned earlier, there has been some allegation of physical abuse that forensically, from our perspective, has not been confirmed yet, but that's under investigation.
For children who are in fostering and adoption—and this was alluded to, I believe, by one of the other speakers—there is a cash incentive for these children to be adopted. It's $200 per month to up to $600, including bonuses for children with severe disabilities, so you're looking at an economic aspect—