Thank you very much for the question. I think it really would be useful, perhaps, to go through Canada's six priorities and how the crosswalk to human rights is important.
If you take, for example, Canada's first priority, on security and the rule of law, we see the critical importance of security for all and the particular situation of women in that regard. Our program, for example, with the Ministry of the Interior on policing and the expansion of policing services to include both protection of women and victims of violence, but also the expansion of Canadian mentoring and of the actual complement of female police officers in the country, has been part and parcel of our effort.
With respect to the rule of law element within that priority, the discussion we had this morning with respect to family law and the overall sense of how human rights and justice fits within it is a core element of what we do.
When we move from there to the aspect of basic services, as the second of Canada's six priorities, here we are looking at education for girls and education for women as part of a targeted effort by Canada to provide the basic services that connect citizens to the state. That has been one element of our effort.
We have done very specific work on maternal and child health, including signature efforts on polio, efforts on tuberculosis, and work to try to provide the basic services to citizens in an area that tries to target those most deprived elements of society—in this case, women and girls in particular.
The same thing applies to humanitarian assistance, an area in which we're doing a lot of work in targeting our food aid and food for literacy. The work we're doing, for example, in Kandahar on food for literacy has provided support for 11,000 women to gain literacy for the very first time.
We can see, across all six of our priorities, the entry point on how human rights and the protection of women and girls is important to meeting our objectives.