Thank you very much, Ms. Yip, for your question.
First, I think we have to recognize Taiwan for what it is. It's a political entity, according to our one China policy. We need to be very clear about that. They are at the forefront of disinformation from China. As a result, they have the experience and institutions to be the central nexus to help Canada deal with some of the disinformation challenges we face within our own relationship with China.
I also mentioned South Korea. South Korea faces disinformation challenges with regard to the north.
Again, I think collectively using the different kinds of experiences these countries on the forefront of disinformation have is critical for identifying disinformation, finding ways to combat disinformation and pushing back on disinformation. I include Australia because Australia's experience over the past several years with China has been very difficult. It also has experience in managing disinformation. This is why I've advocated for Taiwan, South Korea, perhaps Japan, Australia and the United States to collectively work with Canada to share the patterns of disinformation they've identified, the processes with which they push back and, importantly, how they educate citizens to be more critical of the kind of information they read online so they can pre-empt the challenges associated with disinformation.
This is how I am envisaging a minilateral partnership with these countries and political entities.