I had never been asked before to change the minutes, except at the next board meeting. If there were corrections to be made or things that needed to be clearer, people would say so and then they voted on the minutes, which was their usual procedure.
At that point, out of courtesy, I sent the draft minutes to Mr. Braun, as the new chair, and asked for his comments. He called me back and gave me a whole bunch of comments, which were acceptable to me. They dealt with the way some motions were phrased and stuff like that. It made sense, so I made the changes, but he also wanted me to change the fact that the president, Mr. Beauregard, had told the board that we would not go to Durban II, wouldn't participate in Durban II, and wouldn't be involved in Durban II. He wanted me to change that to say it was the board that had decided that. But the decision had been taken prior to the board meeting, so I told him so. I said, “This is not what I recall, this is not in my notes, and I'll leave it as it is. At the next meeting, if the other board members agree with you, then I'll change it.” So he was really pressuring me to change that.