This is the case of Cerro de San Pedro, in the state of San Luis Potosi. I'm going to summarize.
We have a case where we have a company that has been tried in Mexican courts, found to be operating illegally, and has been committing human rights abuses. These things go back to 1998. I think the point I want to bring with that case is that throughout, we have moments when the Canadian government has been continuing to support this company, either through consular support or through continued CPP investment, even when Mexican tribunals declared the company did not have a legal operating permit.
To conclude, there hasn't been a lot of response for Mexicans asking the Canadian government for redress in serious cases like the case of Cerro de San Pedro. People have come to the Canadian embassy on various occasions asking for the ambassador to provide a response. They've come to Ottawa to ask for redress. I'm not saying that the Canadian government has been unwilling or negligent in their response. It's simply that they're incapable of responding to what is a documented and very serious case in Mexico.