We would report upon the purpose and the payments that were made in accordance with the language in the amendment. However, in terms of our ability to distinguish and to separate out a Canadian dollar within an AIIB project from, for example, a British dollar or an Australian dollar, whether or not that reporting requirement is there for a separate report, we're not able to distinguish out because of the way in which the bank functions, which Neil has explained in some detail. That money goes to broader bank capital. It's not dollar by dollar that we're able to track.
We will, of course, continue to report on the activities of Canadian international assistance funding, regardless of this amendment. If it's a separate report or if it's incorporated into other transparent reporting, that would, of course, cover the AIIB. But the reporting would be similar to the reporting we have for other development banks where we're not able to distinguish and track Canadian dollars separate from the projects that the bank is funding as a whole.
Again, we can't distinguish a Canadian dollar from an Australian or British dollar in these cases with these banks. That's also how it works for the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the Asia Development Bank, and the EBRD.