It's actually a very important point. In addition to funding to be able to stabilize the population that returns, which goes through all the elements that I have mentioned, health, education, etc., you rightly point out the fact that we need reconciliation. We need transitional justice. We need a truth and reconciliation commission so that people start to be able to live side by side again. That's part of the work of the United Nations and the UNHCR, and also of partners like the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the UN Development Programme, with the support of Canada. That goes also into accountability mechanisms, justice mechanisms.
Canada is a champion for the ICC, the International Criminal Court, and that may be, depending on the timing, a measure to ensure that people return with the confidence that the atrocities of the past have been addressed and will not be repeated.
It's extremely important because when people return and are displaced for a second time outside their country of origin, as we have seen recently with the Rohingya, for example, it takes far more time for them to ever return to their country of origin because the second time they have concerns of a repeat.