This is why one of the strategies we've been employing, which is being led by the United States—and Canada has been supporting it, and Spain and other countries have been working on it —is what we're calling “safe mobility offices”. It's an initiative to try to provide access to legal immigration routes earlier in the process so that instead of travelling all the way through, there are operations set up in Colombia, Ecuador, Costa Rica and Guatemala. The idea is to try to assess if someone has a protection problem and can articulate it now. There may be a migrant with a non-protection-driven reason, something that's not being driven by persecution but some other need. We then try to determine if they access available programs in the United States, Canada and such.
This is a measure we're already taking. We're already into the hundreds of thousands of people who are accessing it. This is one way we're trying to, as I said, avoid the dangers that are so evident in the Darien Gap and other parts of the Americas.