Thank you for that question.
You bring up the issue of jurisdiction, and whose jurisdiction it is to be monitoring this, as well as what the role of Canada is.
Whether it be the federal or provincial government, or whether it be the Canadian and Mexican government, or the provincial and state and federal government in Mexico, for example, jurisdiction is always an issue we need to be respectful of. We would no more expect them to come into our country and start to do reviews than we should be going into theirs without meeting the proper norms, the international standards, for such investigations. So that is an important issue.
There is a role for Canada in this field, and a very important role. We should be acting on the international stage. There is the work that is being undertaken by Mr. Ruggie at the UN, the OECD work, the work on international standards that have been met that was cited by a number of the other speakers. Canada has a very important role to be at that table when those standards are developed and to be putting our important views into that context. Both from a corporate level and from a government level, we have not always been as diligent as we should be to be at that table, to be making sure the standards are high, and that we are moving everybody forward together.