As I said, I think human rights defenders in Colombia believe it is a very dangerous business to take an unconditional approach to free trade with the country; that's obvious.
Now, organizations over there have tons of recommendations around different issues. All of them know very well what they're talking about, around the extrajudicial execution, for example. They have been talking about the necessity to go from the penal justice system to the ordinary justice system, the different cases of extrajudicial executions, because they believe there is not enough separation of power between the executive and the judiciary penal system for those cases to be investigated and judged without impunity. That's only one example.
I think one fundamental condition to making sure human rights are respected in Colombia is to make sure that human rights defenders are protected. To show that, well, the government would first have to stop making those signals, señalamientos, I was talking about, those accusations that expose the defenders to very important risks.
The second thing is to recognize publicly the legitimacy of the work of those human rights defenders. That's a very key issue in terms of protection, in terms of human rights, because without defenders we don't have a solid plan for improving the human rights situation over there.