Hon Speaker, I am sure I could start again and give the answer, because I have answered the question. I have said we have made interventions in the Eastern Cape and I have said we realised that there were no regulations to implement section 100. We then had to work to produce regulations so that we were able to deal with the situation. Now, we have done everything; the work is proceeding.
Now, how could you demand results in that kind of situation and ask where the results are? The results are that we have discovered what the challenges were and we have remedied them. We now have plans that are being implemented. If you want the progress results, that is what they are. And we are remedying the situation in the Eastern Cape.
The very fact that in both the Eastern Cape and Limpopo the national government had to apply section 100 means that there was something wrong, and we are dealing with that. You talk as if only when the intervention was being made there was a problem. The intervention was made because there was a problem. We are in the process of correcting the problem.
That is why, if you talk about the books that have not been delivered, it's precisely because there were problems that we are fixing. That is what it is. I don't think you could do this in any other way, unless you are a magician. You come, you raise a handkerchief, you say, "Everything must change", and it changes. That can't be. Thank you, hon Speaker.