Thank you very much.
Thank you, Mr. Schulz, for being here. I really appreciate your discussion.
I had the opportunity to be in Zambia a couple of years ago. After meeting members of their parliament, I met with members of the extractive industry and many other companies doing business in Zambia. Zambia, as we know, has come out of a socialist regime and they are anxious to see companies come in now and provide expertise and development in the area. But the Canadian companies we met said that they're caught in this no-man's land. The Zambians say that in the past, companies provided schools and these companies aren't providing schools any more; they provided roads, and they're not providing roads any more. If you talk to the extractive companies, who pay an enormous amount of tax to the government.... The government has a policy of providing the schools and providing the roads. They're caught in this tension, shall we say.
How do you see us helping to alleviate those tensions? Are there things that Canada can do as bridge-building—in the metaphorical sense—to assist in lowering the temperature for our companies to go in and do that kind of development work?