Thank you for asking the question.
You know, it started from a very simple idea. When COVID hit all of us, many were asking, how can we do better? How can we coordinate? How can we come together? It's a very simple thing. I took my Rolodex, basically, and invited about 15 to 20 of our colleagues around the world to join a call, which we had at the height of the COVID pandemic and I think was almost weekly. I have called a good portion of the G20 countries, but also other countries such as Morocco and Peru, where, you will recall, when we were trying to repatriate, we had a lot of issues. I invited a number of countries, and it was extremely beneficial. Actually, it's continuing. We have had 13 calls.
This is one of the examples of Canada leading in the world. We've not talked much about it, but we've done a lot of work when it comes to transit hubs and when it comes to air bridges. You may recall that I said we needed to maintain—to Mr. Chong's point—air bridges, because at the beginning of the pandemic I was saying that there was a risk, as we saw during the last war, of losing some air-bridge connectivity between Canada and Europe and other regions.
We talk about supply chains and we talk about what we can do together to alleviate and to make sure that we're sharing best practices. It's really amazing, because it's one of the groups where there are no prepared statements. It lasts for an hour; Canada is chairing, and whoever can come, with countries that have been...whether it's France, whether it's Germany. We had India recently join. We have countries such as Brazil, South Korea and Singapore. It's a number of countries that just came together. Italy comes to mind. We just want to share best practices and make sure that we're creating an informal forum for foreign ministers to coordinate the response on COVID-19.