The short answer is yes, but it's not just the Commonwealth. As I mentioned in my remarks, we have regular meetings—and I don't mean once a month, I mean once every one or two days now—with our G-8 partners and with the co-chairs, a regular daily kind of update. We're watching resources for humanitarian aid; we're looking at political pressures. I mentioned that the U.K. foreign minister, the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, will be talking to Mr. Cannon hopefully tonight or tomorrow morning, depending—Mr. Miliband is on his way back from Sri Lanka. So they're going to talk about what he saw, what they saw—the French foreign minister as well—so our minister will know as he's going in what kinds of things are happening as well.
This is an age when it's continuous. My colleague, Leslie, is looking at the humanitarian kinds of things we can do there—we can only do these things in partnership with others. There's nothing we can do that just goes by Canada's side, but it is very much an international effort.
