With respect to the question about CIDA, yes, absolutely, for several years there has been considerable support from CIDA for human rights, rule of law, and good governance programming in China.
Number one, I think the support in this programming would almost certainly benefit from the same kind of evaluation and review the dialogue process had with Professor Burton's careful attention, whether or not he'd be the one to do it. But a review of that kind would be necessary and very helpful here.
To come back to that second piece, about how critical it is that we start to bring the CIDA piece into the wider question about what should Canada's overall strategy be, I don't think we can create, design, and deliver a human rights strategy over at CIDA without making sure it's completely connected to all other aspects of Canada's China policy, to give it a short title.
It would be very good to see this committee start to push for an overarching study that starts looking at how all of the pieces fit together, how the CIDA funding complements what the dialogue is trying to achieve, how this is brought into the development of Canada's trade policies, and how it informs and bolsters what we may be trying to do in front of the Human Rights Council that is going to have some new opportunities for multilateral action. I think the critical way forward now is that all of this comes together as a whole.