Thanks for that. We're at 50% women ambassadors, actually, or heads of missions, so we're pretty excited by that.
In terms of what we've been trying to do in Denmark, we have set up four meetings on Arctic perspectives. We were pleased at the one we held last month. Natan Obed was one of the panellists, as was Cynthia Wesley-Esquimaux, who chairs the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation as the chair in reconciliation at Lakehead University. They were very, very well received.
I think this becomes very important, as Canada is able to set an example and particularly focus on the relationship with Inuit, and on Inuit mobility. Hopefully, with the new flight that will go from Nuuk to Iqaluit and then down, and then hopefully over to northern Quebec in Kuujjuaq, there's a real example of “nothing about us without us”, and being able to show that we know that it's a journey, not a destination, and it's not scary. These relationships are ones in which we learn a great deal.
I know that with the Arctic parliamentary meeting recently in the Nordics, your colleague Lori Idlout was a bit worried about the way things were being framed in terms of indigenous rights. I think as parliamentarians we all need to come together and work with that kind of reconciliation across the world, and also know that those indigenous peoples that you've identified in Canada, and their working nation to nation, will be hugely important as we put forward their voices.