Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much for all of that information. I get a lot of my information on what's going on in Africa from my weekly read of The Economist. They generally have a really good section in there on current updates.
I know that we have put significant investment into these areas, so the question is not really just money. We see a lot of NGOs going in there. I have an organization from my own riding of Newmarket—Aurora that is working in Uganda to build a school. This is completely separate from any government funding that comes in. This is an organization that has been over there regularly in the last four years establishing the school, building the facility, ensuring that they have the engineering capability to keep the school going and make sure that there's water and cooling in the hot weather. So there's a lot of money going into these areas.
I'd just pick up on a comment from The Economist this week. They're commenting actually about the country of Nigeria, saying, “Fraud and corruption still scare businesses away from Nigeria, even though its market of 140m people is Africa’s largest.”
My question is framed around the question, and maybe, Mr. Sunquist, you can run out the clock carrying on with the answer. We need to build other institutions as well. Where are we in helping these countries to build a judiciary whereby contracts can be enforced and whereby businesses can go in and know that they have government organizations they can deal with that are going to promote long-term health, not only of the economy but also of human rights and all of these other things that we look to a society to be building?