I know when I'm outclassed.
To respond to your question, in our observation, Canadian companies that do business in Mongolia have been scrupulous from the beginning in pursuing community relations practices and corporate social responsibility standards of the highest nature.
If it were not in their nature to do so anyway, which in fact it is, they would do it simply because mining has been such a political football that it required the support from the grassroots. It required the support of the village or soum mayors and the aimag or provincial governors.
In fact, in the Oyu Tolgoi project, one of the largest factors that helped sway Mongolian public opinion and then parliament was the fact that the entire political leadership of the province in which the project was located was unanimously in support of it.
There have been reports from about a year ago about a job action against a Canadian company that operates the largest gold mine in the country. We looked into this, and even government authorities found that, to a very large degree, it was engineered from the outside, that it had little or nothing to do with substantive corporate practices.