Following the Christchurch shooting, the Prime Minister stood in the House and called on the international community to come together and to address the online violence that is part of the spectrum of terrorism that leads to massacres in Canada and around the world. The international community did come together.
We've introduced a charter around what's happening online. We're working with our international allies and the platforms themselves to address misinformation but also terrorism that occurs online. That's work that Karina Gould and Nav Bains and the Prime Minister, as well as Ralph Goodale, have been keenly focused on. I think it is exciting. It's uncharted territory, and if we don't step up to do something, the violence that happens online will continue to spill over into our communities.
World Press Freedom Day was a few days ago. I made an announcement of an investment of over $11 million to ensure that Journalists for Human Rights continue to have the funding they need to send journalists from Canada, who put their hands up and choose to go abroad in some of the most distressing situations, including in the Middle East and including parts of—