Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much, Madame Arbour, for the great work you've done as well as for your testimony today.
I'll pick up right where my colleague left off. I'll begin with the first question on my list.
Mr. Marston was just asking about how we inculcate the dedication, the commitment, the idea of democratic institutions--democracy, very much in and of itself--into states that heretofore have really not known that. They don't have the habits of democracy. They don't have the institutions.
Do I oversimplify it by saying it's just a raw exercise in education in order for that to stick? You make the case very well that it's very difficult to have police with some kind of integrity if you don't have the democratic institutions behind them and the right framework in which to operate.