Thank you, Chair.
Thank you, all four of you, for joining the issue. I thought each of you made some pretty significant points, and I think this is an opportunity to get some dialogue between opposing views.
Let me start with the testimony of Mr. Hodge. I agree with you, as far as the ombudsman is concerned. It's a pity that report wasn't picked up and implemented by the government. But we have what we have, and Bill C-300 seems to be the only thing to be able to move things forward.
I want to address several points that Mr. Hodge made and ask Ms. Shanta Martin to comment on them. The first has to do with his point number four, which is that apparently Canada would alienate developing countries by imposing a regulatory regime. It would be imposing our will--I think that was the point he was making.
His fifth point had to do with the standards in Bill C-300 being unclear, although I'm not quite sure how they could be unclear when they're set out in the guidelines. There's that, and the related point, which is that if Canadian companies withdraw they'll do more harm than good to the indigenous population.
I'd be interested in your comments, Ms. Martin, in light of both your general findings and how you would apply those arguments to Papua New Guineau.