Ms. Elsawi, I just have a couple of comments before I give you the last word. I think you're remarkably eloquent, and you're brave for coming. I thank you for doing that, because I think as a woman between north and south Sudan, you have the greatest challenge. Our thoughts are with you. I also want to thank Inter Pares for bringing you over. I think that's very important for us to hear.
I want to get to what's already been said and what I asked earlier. All the attention has been about the south. That's just the way it's been for years. You face very unique challenges that southern women don't. We need to know, as a committee, how we can help you. Would it be, as was happening during the war, that you bring women's groups out to Nairobi so that it's easier? Can we fund conferences and things like that where women from the north and the south can come and continue to dialogue? I greatly fear exactly what you've said: the communication that was necessary to bring the war to an end will not stay in place after separation takes place. I think you need the help of the Government of Canada and many others to allow the structure to take place so that communication continues to happen and women's groups keep coming together.
Can you give me some practical suggestions about parliamentarians going over and doing those things or maybe bringing some people here? Do you have other suggestions? How can we help so that this stays together?