I can try to answer that question. Just to position these payments in context, the Government of Canada provides debt relief to heavily indebted and poor countries in the context of our engagement in the Paris Club. We negotiate this debt relief agreement, but our exposures are held by EDC, the Canadian Wheat Board, and the Canadian International Development Agency.
While the Department of Finance is negotiating the debt relief, we then compensate these organizations because we've just written off their exposure. However, we're now essentially cancelling these payments because the reality is that EDC, the Wheat Board, or CIDA had written down these payments long ago because there was a default or non-performing situation. The writedown was 10 years ago, so essentially the federal government is paying itself to do business, and we thought this was inefficient.
More directly to your question, last year we provided debt relief to the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Ivory Coast.