Yes, there are 20 countries of focus.
The objective of establishing countries of focus was to enable us to better concentrate our resources in order to have much more impact. Previously, we could have been involved in more than a hundred countries, and if I can use the analogy, it was a scattershot approach; it was a little more difficult to know that one was actually achieving results.
By focusing on a smaller number of countries using those criteria of need, efficiency, ability to work, and on whether we can actually make a difference and how it fits with Canada's strategic priorities, we're more able to establish a frame that enables us to first of all articulate results for the future and then to measure against them. If you can't name it and you can't measure it, you can't actually be sure that you're making progress.
Within those 20 countries of focus we further concentrated, identifying among them the three thematic priorities that Ms. Bossenmaier mentioned in her opening remarks, to ensure that we knew within each country which thematic priorities we would work within.
There is a connection there, because under the principles of aid effectiveness, of course, there is the notion of harmonization and country ownership. If I think of the country ownership and the harmonization, we had to make sure that what we were seeking to do—which met our criteria within our thematic areas—also met with the recipient country's poverty reduction strategy. They all have something of that ilk themselves. We were looking for that sweet spot wherein everybody's interests coincided and we knew that the recipient government was really behind the initiative; that enabled us to move forward.
The countries of focus are: Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Ghana, Mali, Mozambique, Pakistan, Senegal, Tanzania, Vietnam, Bolivia, the Caribbean region, Colombia, Honduras, Indonesia, Peru, and Ukraine.