First, Canada is part of the Berne process. I don't know quite on what level it happens in China; it happens in Canada. But, yes, they are part of that, and, yes, I definitely think this group should have the oversight and reporting back, which you're talking about.
In terms of a parliamentary delegation going to China, if that's something you would like to do for your own edification, fine. If you think you're going to accomplish anything in terms of human rights, that's another story. It depends on where you all are in terms of your own education, and so on. But you need to do your homework, you need to get briefings from all the people who need to give you briefings, and you need to know what you're looking at and partly how to read it. I think that's very important.
You brought up something else that you might want to consider. You mentioned sex workers and problems in Canada. They're probably all over the world. Maybe that's something that needs to be thought about more in terms of dialogue—that there really would be dialogues and this kind of exchange of information, in terms of the kinds of problems you have and how you're coping with them—opening it up that way, so there really is an exchange of ways of working. In one of the seminars associated with the dialogues, which I attended, that really did happen; it opened up the issue and made it much easier to talk about what the problems were in China. So I think that in bringing this up, you're bringing up a bigger issue.
Can I go back to boycotts for a minute?
My response is, forget about them. It's over; it's done with. It's a big issue; it's going to be. It's much more important at this point to use the fact that there will be world attention on the Chinese government, and on China in general, in 2008, and to use this to bring up some of the human rights and other issues, which you want to bring up—labour issues among them, and I'd like to talk to you about that later.