Just very briefly, there are a few things.
One thing we're doing in the Canada-Tibet Committee is trying to constantly apply pressure on China before the Olympics. We're not saying to boycott the Olympics, but we are saying we have to do whatever we can on an international level before and after to try to pressure China as much as possible to improve its human rights record. Another thing that's important, too, is that we don't have to go far. If we look in Tibet, there is the question of labour conditions. There's also the question of how the Tibetans generally are treated in terms of the projects—Canadian money, investments, etc. So we don't have to go far to see within what is known as the so-called “Chinese territories” cases of human rights violations in that circumstance.
The other thing, too, is using the UN instruments. Canada has signed on to a number of UN instruments that we could use to apply pressure on them that are particular in upholding the whole question of international human rights law. It's very important. I think those are tools that we can use more to our advantage, since they are a part of the UN Human Rights Council--tools that we should be using more to our advantage, actually, to pressure China to take more concrete action on human rights in general.