It's very often known that in society in general, knowledge is power. One of the biggest concerns of the families has been lack of access to information, lack of knowledge. It makes the victims feel, as you mentioned, even more victimized, and it prevents the families, the victims from having the opportunity to basically be human beings in this society, to have human dignity, when it is their family member who has gone missing. They are just left feeling excluded and therefore re-victimized by the process.
Anything that is going to allow an additional access to information is positive, but as mentioned before, given language differences, given educational differences, given lack of access to basic communication—phone, Internet, these types of things—there are going to be differences, and there will be difficulties in having access to the information if we don't acknowledge those differences.