Okay.
Obviously for so many Canadians hoping to get their family out, they see how quickly the response is happening in other jurisdictions and how that is not the case in this one.
I've also been hearing quite a lot from humanitarians, certainly organizations that are working there that are acknowledging the complexity of the region and the difficulty that we have there. There is also a massive diplomacy gap from their perspective. They've told me about humanitarian access, targeting of civilians, the looting of humanitarian aid and administrative blockages. These are all problems that require a concerted diplomatic effort, and it is unclear to many people in Canada, many people within the humanitarian community, what Canada is doing to make sure those diplomatic efforts are being put forward.
I'll give you a couple of questions there, and I'll pass it over to you. Knowing that this is potentially the largest humanitarian crisis that is happening, knowing that this is a government that has said we certainly have a feminist international assistance policy, and we've been told there is a feminist foreign policy, can you also tell us how many people are working on this crisis from each department, and how many people have been allocated to this? Knowing the size, knowing the scope, we'd just like to get a sense of the importance that the Canadian government is putting on this crisis.