Sure. I think our position is quite similar. I should note that it's increasingly coordinated. We have the opportunity at a working level and at higher levels, all the way up to the minister, to engage with our like-minded democracies on some of these critical issues, to ensure that we're not missing important parts of our approach and our advocacy, and where we can, to coordinate that advocacy.
Of course, we're also not alone in suffering some of the consequences for that advocacy. I think there would be a long list of, as you say, middle powers and friendly democracies that have been punished at one time or another for permitting the Dalai Lama to visit, for example. I think many of us have been through periods where we've suffered the wrath of the Chinese government for engaging with Tibet.