As Ken indicated before, we manage projects in 23 different countries, and some of them are in Africa. Some projects are funded by CIDA and some projects are not. The projects that are funded in Africa tend to be focused on capacity-building, training and education, and changing the livelihood of people through that training and education—through improving their participation not only at the workplace level but within their communities. So this translates into the term that CIDA doesn't like any more, which is advocacy. That means they engage in actions with their governments to actually improve the situation and work with their governments. We have very specific projects. We have projects that promote gender equality where women are actually improving their livelihood in their communities by improving their employability and their access to certain services they didn't have before, hence changing what is going on in their communities.
To give you another concrete example, we have a partnership with the trade unions in Africa over HIV/AIDS. That project is really aimed at improving prevention programs at the workplace level and educating people more about HIV/AIDS at the workplace but also in the communities. In fact, if you look at the impact that has had, you will see that it coincides with a diminishment of HIV/AIDS in Africa in general, and a reduction of the peak that was reported last year.