Deputy Chairperson, in regard to the response of the Deputy Minister, I want to find out what the Department of International Relations and Co-operation, or the Deputy Minister's office specifically, is going to do about this issue of the Western Cape. He said quite rightly that the Western Cape does not recognise our indigenous people, whether they are the Khoi-San, or others - they do not recognise them. What steps can your department take, Deputy Minister, to force them into that recognition? Thank you. The DEPUTY MINISTER OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND CO-OPERATION (Mr M L Fransman): Chairperson, the Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs which, as I indicated earlier, is the domestic custodian of these matters, has been processing the new National Traditional Affairs Bill. The Minister who sits just in front of me and who was the acting Minister at that time drove a process - I think in August, September and October - to get consultation with the Khoi and the San community, so that we could make sure that we put it into legislation. This is precisely to deal with the pockets of the Western Cape that refuse to appreciate the rights of the indigenous society in this country. Thank you.