Again, the reality is the situation that they're faced with on the ground in Honduras. If there was a good public place to get treatment for their employees, that would probably be their preference. If they could pay for that facility through the government, to see that facility placed on the ground, they'd probably prefer that too. But the reality is, that isn't an option.
So what is the best option for the employees that you have working for you? You can ignore it because a lot of companies would just ignore it. They'd say it's not their problem, we'll just find somebody else, but they're not. They're actually putting in the facilities to take care of these people.
You will always have people who have problems. That's just the nature. You have 24,000 employees. If you looked at any company with that number of employees, you'll have all sorts. It's just the nature of the volume of the people you have in your business. I guess what I'm trying to say, is this out of the realm of normality in that size of an operation? I don't know the answer to that. I'm not sure if you do. That's the question I would answer.
I want to kind of go through the media here a little bit. Can you give us a picture of the media in Honduras? How many papers are there? How many journalists are there? Are they political papers? Are they papers like here where they're relatively neutral? They have their columnists who give their opinions, but do they actually have reporters who just report? What does it look like in Honduras, the papers and the publications and that?