Mr. Chair, let me make a quick response to that, and then I'd like to turn it over to the executive director of our CTO team in Taipei to speak to the latter part of the question.
Obviously Canada, with others, has spoken out, is on the record and has taken policy decisions to respond to the deterioration of rights and freedoms under the implementation of the national security law in Hong Kong. Those developments came quickly, not least opportunistically, because of conditions provided by COVID, and Canada and others have looked at that with concern.
Taiwan is a very different situation in the sense that the processes and tools used to shift those goalposts in Hong Kong were effectively through legislative means and law enforcement. Obviously Taiwan, de facto, is administered by a different government, a democratically elected one and, as you point out, one that has been a bastion of human rights and progressive policies within the region.
With that, I'd like to turn it over to Jordan Reeves.