Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Day.
Let me start by saying that, having this divided up into micro-objectives may look good, but it makes it difficult to assess and to get a good idea of the development that has gone on.
That is what I think, after having tried to understand it. But we debated this in the House the other day, and it seemed to me that people were in agreement that this war cannot be won with weapons.
We may be able to win minds through development—at least, we hope so. But, at the same time, we cannot develop schools and the like without security.
So how do you think that we will be able to convince the people that there is hope?
From what I read, when we started, in 2001, 2002, 2003, women could walk around without wearing a burka. Now they no longer dare to do that. If they go out, they have to wear a burka. No development indicators there. You must have thought about that.
How do you respond to that?