We have a KAIROS partnership coordinator for Latin America, and Colombia is one of our priority countries with regard to human rights and also resource extraction.
I'm not very familiar with our work in Colombia in that area, but I know that just two weeks ago partners from Latin America, from Honduras and Guatemala, were here in Canada and met with some members of Parliament expressing their support for Bill C-300.
If I can just respond to previous questions, the partners overseas look at Canadian mining companies as leading the industry, and the fact that the Canadian government has this opening for organizations, industry, and NGOs to present and have their input on a particular bill shows our democratic process. Partners very much appreciate that because in their countries they don't have that space.
So when we talk about Canadian mining companies impacting communities, they want to come to us and say, your company is doing this--and it's eroding Canada's reputation, from our perspective. So passing legislation that would make companies more responsible would increase Canada's reputation overseas. This is not to say that other mining companies from other countries--for example, Australia--are not being lobbied because of their conduct and behaviour.