Chairperson, the question is whether we are going to increase our security involvement on the borders of Lesotho, Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Swaziland. Yes, indeed, following the decision of Cabinet last year, we have already deployed personnel to the borders and we phased in our deployment, largely because of financial constraints.
We have six phases and we hope that, by 2013, we will have fully taken control of the South African borders, which is a total of 4 471 km of land border, 2 798 km of maritime sea border and 7 660 km of air border. We are budgeting for this and we believe that by that time we should be fully operational in all the areas.
As we speak now, we have completed our first phase, which we started before June last year, to ensure that we have complete security for the World Cup. We are now doing phase two. We started at the Kruger National Park and we will go on with Pongola and Wepener. Phase three and so on is to ensure that we tighten up wherever we need to concentrate on.
The phasing in is determined by the priority areas and the security risks that we face. The second criterion has been that we do not have the necessary funding right now, but, in two years' time, we expect that we will be completely functional, everywhere we need to be. Thank you.