There are not only the international migrations where migrants reach Canada or Europe, but in Africa there are a lot of migrants from Burundi and Rwanda now, a lot of migrants in Ethiopia and Kenya, and many other countries. We actually have an emergency fund. We created that so we can also respond to those situations. For example, Rwanda alerted us and said they had so many refugees from Burundi, who were receiving antiretroviral drugs because they are living with HIV and other things. Who is paying for that? Then we can step in and ensure that there is continuation.
We have a Middle East response under which we provide funding mainly for tuberculosis in migrants coming from Syria and Iraq going to Jordan and Lebanon. We provide the funding so that their health programs can continue. We call that a people-centred approach, because there are no countries, if you like, no national programs, no ministries of health. You follow the people and make sure that they can receive treatment and services, even if they migrate internally or across borders. That's a special program we started a few years ago, and it becomes more and more important that we do that because the old kind of model of a country with a national program works in many places, but in many places it doesn't anymore.