First of all, we met the Prime Minister yesterday briefly. But I think it is a significant event, really, because it may be interpreted that Canada officially recognizes the status of North Korean refugees. Fleeing North Korea is an anti-state crime. You are executed. You are imprisoned in the gulag. But in Canada, officially, the Prime Minister recognized and supported the status of refugees. This is a significant event. I mean, the effect will be great from now on, because the head of the state recognized our action as quite legitimate.
I think that's the beginning. If we have a parliamentary resolution here in Canada, that's something really significant too. So far the United States has a human rights act. In Japan there was a very brief resolution, and in the European Parliament, yes, there was a very brief one. If Canada joins them....
Canada is different, really, because they say that whatever the United States or Japan do about North Korea, that's a political plot, because they have keen military and economic interests in the Korean Peninsula. But Canada is independent. We are objective. We are only concerned about human rights. So they respect whatever we do, and I think that will work.