Mr. Sullivan, if I may just bridge from where we were talking about what WUSC is doing, we had an intervention here some weeks ago from Jack Mintz. He said that Canada can contribute leadership for the economy, finance, and the extractive resources, and can help countries with public policy. That's not a direct quote; that's kind of my synopsis here. The handling of their natural resources is imperative. The right fiscal and regulatory policies will make this the most important part, and Canada has such a great record.
I just came back a few weeks ago from South Sudan, a brand-new country. They have no institutions in place whatsoever and yet they have huge resources in oil, in Abyei, and they know there are gold resources there.
Let's use South Sudan as an example. How would you see Canada helping, right from the ground level—no pun intended—to build the capacities that are going to give them the institutional resources they need, to put these things in place so that WUSC, as an example, could come in and work?
Can you comment on that?