I have a few comments. One is about Canadian companies working in China. The Canada-Tibet Committee has been doing some research trying to track and monitor Canadian companies working in Tibetan territories, such as the Canadian companies involved in the railway and the Canadian mining companies that wish to operate in Tibet or are already operating in Tibet.
We also work in consultation with a number of other Tibet support groups around the world that are also monitoring. So that information could also be made available on the likelihood of human rights violations, or what types of implications there could for human rights violations in Tibetan territory itself.
On DFAIT and the consultations, CTC in a number of ways, not necessarily with DFAIT.... On some of the recommendations I've made, Tibet hasn't necessarily been at the heart of some of these bilateral dialogues. Minority rights have been discussed in some of the dialogues and in others they haven't. Tibet is considered to be an ethnic minority under the PRC. So we would like to see DFAIT actually take more consideration of Tibet as a separate entity in some ways in the bilateral dialogue and strengthen that within the bilateral dialogue itself.