Mr. Latulippe, to return to the question of my colleague, we just came back from a visit to Ghana. There was a Canadian group over there doing some governance work with the Ghanese government. One of the comments that was made there was that one of the difficulties is that the members of Parliament, particularly in the northern regions, are desirous of being involved in policy-making. This policy now is brought down from the government that is in power. The suggestion was that if an organization such as yours would work with the members of Parliament to show them the way to develop this policy at the community level and bring it forward before the government was formed, that policy could probably contribute to the election campaigns themselves and be reinforced through the campaigns so that when the government was formed there would be a reasonable chance that policy would be initiated. This was a comment that was very strongly made.
I saw that also in Haiti, when I was there in 2006. There was a void of any type of policy development by the political parties. I see that you have been doing some work in Haiti.
Again, as you said, you're not working with the members of Parliament yourself. You're working with agency groups that are there in the field. Could you expand on that and tell us, is that local group qualified? Do they have this political party experience themselves, or should that work be done within those local agencies, maybe by former parliamentarians that would be able to guide the process much more effectively?