You certainly raise a number of challenges that Canadian companies face in mining in a global context.
If you look at the Fraser Institute, for example, it does a survey annually on jurisdictions outside and which ones are friendly, if you like, in terms of investment for various countries, various industries, and various organizations. Obviously you've alluded to some of the prerequisites of good governance and making sure an environment has the regulatory and the policy levers that allow for industry to take part in a particular setting.
I know that even in the case of Afghanistan a few years back, there was a call that was put out for mining a particular deposit—I believe it was the Aynak deposit—and the Chinese ultimately won the bid. Certainly, we had a company out of Canada that did bid as well on that particular possibility.
It is ultimately the decision of the private sector and companies whether those conditions that exist in a foreign context are something they can handle and something they are willing and prepared to take into their equation before they submit a bid or in fact develop a particular project.
You pointed out all of those kinds of issues that the Fraser Institute also points out as some of those conditions and inhibiting factors that might be out there for any jurisdiction, any industry, or any specific company to consider before it decides on a particular project.