I'll answer in English.
There are a few points to make here.
The first is that we've heard several times today that humanitarian needs are extraordinarily high. I believe the UN estimate is that there are 300 million people in need of life-saving humanitarian assistance and who are covered by a humanitarian response plan. This impacts Médecins Sans Frontières in a number of different ways. The first is that we are responding to a very large number of humanitarian crises in roughly 70 different countries. We did 16.5 million outpatient consultations in our programs last year. The needs are very high.
On the humanitarian funding question specifically, I want to emphasize that we're a largely privately funded humanitarian organization. Canada is, in fact, one of only three government donors that we apply to for funding. We're largely privately funded, which allows us to respond very quickly when emergencies happen.
However, the fact of the matter is that the humanitarian system is stretched. There are huge needs that are going completely unmet. Some of that is an efficiency problem or other things. Some of it, very honestly, is simply a lack of funding. In the Rohingya crisis, for example, World Food Programme rations are down to $10 U.S. per person per month. There is simply a funding shortfall for many of the crises around the world.