Sure. Maybe I can respond in two points.
One is that an organization like Oxfam does not make decisions here in Ottawa and then tell local communities what to do. All of our work is with local partners and communities. We work with women's rights organizations in countries like Mexico and around the world. They are the ones leading the agenda. We have the privilege of being a conduit between the Canadian government and public funding and their work to support their communities, so we're not leading the agenda. That being said, there are strong women's rights organizations in every single country we work with. There's no lack of community organizations to work with on the ground.
On the previous question, if I may, I won't comment on UNFPA in particular, but what we do know is that, if you look at Mexico—I'll comment on this personally because my family lives in southern Mexico—indigenous women led the charge for abortion to be legalized in the poorest provinces of Mexico, with Oaxaca being first. Indigenous women led the green wave around abortion, because they know that they are suffering the consequences of unsafe abortion and lack of public services.
This is certainly not something that has been imposed by any foreign agent or the UN. This is very grassroots mobilizing and really impressive mobilizing that has led a country with very restrictive abortion laws to change because of grassroots, rural, indigenous women's movements, so I think we look to them as the leaders we can support. It's not driven from the outside.