Generally, I think in Canada at the refugee board there are some very important or crucial safeguards implemented. In Canada you can have counsel help the refugee. In the international protection, the law doesn't provide this to the refugee, and this is an issue to address.
The second is that in Canada, once you go through the refugee determination process—and I was there—they record the voices every time, which helps for further transparency and accountability. We don't have this overseas. These are things that could help.
The last thing is the sharing of information. Lately, as my colleague mentioned, CIC has been more open in sharing information about country conditions so that we are on the same page. For instance, on the Iraqi issue, until last week we got dozens and dozens of refusals, and I'm sure now there's been a change of policy. It's not only refugee law, but there's also politics involved, of course. Because of this, we hope that acceptances in Damascus will go up.