Absolutely. In fact, we brought with us today a presentation from Imperial Tobacco to its parent company British American Tobacco talking about the contraband market in Canada and the campaign that they waged for many years ostensibly to get contraband under control, but as the presentation reveals, it's been an ongoing public relations exercise to convince lawmakers and the public that contraband is out of control. Why I bring this up in answer to your question is that the presentation makes clear that their partners, Imperial Tobacco's partners, in this campaign to deceive lawmakers are the Canadian Convenience Stores Association, the Canadian one and their western Atlantic and Ontario counterparts, as well as the National Coalition Against Contraband Tobacco.
The tobacco companies in Canada and around the world repeatedly raised the bugaboo of contraband in response to any discussion of a tobacco control intervention. They claimed that when we were talking about display bans. In fact, the then head of the Canadian Convenience Stores Association in around 2010-11 was going around the world to Australia, New Zealand, the U.K. saying that the display bans had caused the contraband problem in Canada, which of course they had nothing to do with. We have display bans across the country. We have a contraband problem in Ontario and Quebec where there is illegal manufacturing on reserves that is not being adequately addressed by enforcement.