It is a very Complex Crisis.
This is a Complex Crisis and we are confronting a dangerous and ruthless enemy, closely linked, as we have heard today, to organised crime, to illegal arms trafficking, to money laundering on a large scale and to the movement of illicit and lethal drugs.
This is a very Complex Crisis.
Secondly, the international community, with the UK playing a leading part, has responded effectively to the Complex Crisis, and we have learned profound lessons in the process.
On the tribal leaders, the hon. Lady was right and answered the question by referring to the Darfur dialogue, because its central purpose is to bring into the process those other interest groups in Darfur which are not necessarily represented by the movements, but which need to play a part in addressing the many concerns and issues that surround This Complex Crisis.
We have evolved our response - we have had to - as this incredibly Complex Crisis has steadily evolved.
Our response to this highly Complex Crisis has had to evolve.
In his recent encyclical letter, Laudato Si', Pope Francis said: “We are faced not with two separate crises, one environmental and the other social, but rather with one Complex Crisis which is both social and environmental.
We have evolved our response as this incredibly Complex Crisis itself has evolved.