Thank you very much for asking me that question.
Again, this is the key. This democratic reform in Burma is right now mainly targeted toward the economy, trade, and investment. They want to have military capitalism. They are interested in military capitalism. They have opened up all this trade. But addressing the ethnic minority issue is not part of the equation. They want to lure the international community, showing all this trade opening and others, while they are putting a blanket on the ethnic minority issue.
In order to address the issue, again I want to emphasize that the international community, including a country like Canada, individually or in coalition—not with a European and American NATO-type intervention, not militarily—should send monitoring groups, aid groups, human rights groups, immediately. I must emphasize immediately. We are running out of time.
While the bureaucracy is working, they are sending all these orders from Naypyidaw, the capital city, to the ground. It takes days and days and days, and in the meantime we're losing time. They are buying time, basically to finish some of the Rohingya people.
The international community must sustain its efforts, without losing momentum, to intervene with humanitarian groups and aid and a UN peacekeeping force, and all of that. You in the international community will also have a better picture of what is happening on the ground, if the international community is present in Arakan state.