Thank you very much.
Thank you for being here today. It's very interesting.
You had mentioned Haiti. I visited Haiti and spoke with the president and his cabinet there, too. One of the difficulties that came through very, very strongly is that they were very dismissive of the role of their members of Parliament. They were very negative, surprisingly, about them as being troublesome and argumentative. You could see that they treated them with disdain. What struck me, being there for the election, at the election of the MPs, is the disconnect between the communities and the members of Parliament—an absolute disconnect. We were at a social community function with a newly minted MP who just sat in a corner and didn't mix with anybody.
What struck me was that perhaps dealing with this sort of rule of law goes along with dealing with governance, and to bringing the government into buying into having long-term understandings of ways forward. One of the things, of course, that would be very helpful to them would be if you were able to put what you've been talking about into print in some way that can be published as a direction of a way forward, much like your Convention on the Rights of the Child, but greatly expanded so that people could emulate or follow best practices. Has there been consideration of doing this to engage the governance this way and to put some of these best practices out so that everybody can see them?
I learned a lot today. I'm sure many people in other countries can, too.