Absolutely.
The lack of access to abortion doesn't stop abortion; it only makes abortion very unsafe and it results in dead women, essentially. That is borne out in instance after instance throughout the globe—here, as well—and it was the big push to decriminalize abortion in Canada.
In terms of what Canada could be doing more of, I would say it's building with the feminist organizing that is happening on the ground. I think sometimes, as I've seen with witnesses, there's often a tension, a feeling like there is a western approach or there's a white saviour mentality. The way we get around that is to build relationships on the ground with feminists who are there in every instance, pushing for their basic human rights and reproductive justice.
I think it is making sure that when we're saying “taking the leadership of local communities,” we're not turning that to mean that we go to the most conservative, anti-choice element in those communities, but rather that we find the feminists who are already working in whatever situation we are attempting to support—and it's support, not intervention, usually.