Well, I'm not aware of cases where a local school would have received money from a Chinese entity.
This being said, I think that many schools and universities are struggling with, for instance, the Confucius Institute, because they don't have the resources to offer Mandarin training. Just to come back to what Mr. Fragiskatos was asking earlier, we need to develop our expertise on China, and that means learning Mandarin and getting more young people to visit China to learn the language. Universities are struggling. They don't have resources to create their own courses. Here comes the Confucius centre, which says, “We'll take care of this”, and of course, their curriculum is biased.
I would say also that a number of members of Parliament have been to China on trips paid for by the Chinese government, but in fact, I think we have done some of that ourselves in the past. Probably it would be necessary to clarify the rules that apply. On the one hand, again, I think we need to develop—and I would encourage you to develop—links with the Chinese Communist Party, because we need to understand them if we want to try to influence them, but at the same time, probably this should be done using our own money.