Yes, it's my pleasure.
One of our recommendations was for the Government of Canada to review how effective its implementation of brokering controls is. Brokering controls were implemented into the Export and Import Permits Act in 2018. That happened after Canada acceded to the Arms Trade Treaty, or the ATT—or due to that, I should say. That bill passed beforehand.
What these regulations do is apply an extraterritorial layer on Canada's export control regime, so that if there's a Canadian entity or a Canadian citizen that is brokering an arms deal between a foreign exporter and a foreign importer, they are subject to Canadian controls. One of the reasons this was introduced is that brokering has been identified as a major driver of insecurity in the international arms trade.