Thank you very much.
Absolutely, I agree. I think the biggest priority we have and that Canada can play a role in is the question of the ongoing integration of border communities. The biggest outbreak of violence will be along the border, partly because it's not demarcated, partly because of oil, partly because of politics. But that's the role that we can have, how to keep those communities working together.
When you have groups of Arab tribes expelled from the upper Nile back into the north, it's only by negotiation with local leaders in those communities that those people can move back. There's not enough focus or investment in those local leaders at that level; they're the ones who have the capacity on the ground to resolve something. The political elites in Khartoum and Juba don't sufficiently represent the people everywhere to be able to negotiate at that level on their behalf. What we've seen in Darfur is exactly the same. The more you can promote village-to-village mediation of some kind, economic trading, something that means they have some reason not to kill each other in the future, the better the situation will be. That's really where I think we can most make a difference.