We are in close dialogue with IRCC—Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada—which is our partner in the resettlement, especially when it comes to government-assisted resettlement or the blended visa program for refugees who are resettled in Canada. As I briefly mentioned, the global criteria of resettlement have been agreed upon by 35 members states, including Canada, and there is an objective assessment of the most vulnerable refugees whose survival is at risk in the first country where they found asylum.
Let me clarify that Canada decides the level of resettlement. Every year the minister of IRCC comes before Parliament to submit the immigration levels, and as part of the immigration levels they say those who will be admitted to the country on humanitarian grounds. Then there's a discussion between the IRCC and the UNHCR on where those refugees should be coming from. We provide IRCC with a map of where the most vulnerable refugees are. As we speak, we have identified 1.4 million out of the 25 million refugees who need resettlement as survivors—not for a better life, but as survivors—and Canada will resettle 10,000 this year through the government and UNHCR.