Just to add to that, one of the big challenges there is the lack of capacity among the attorney general's office and the police forces to investigate crimes and find evidence and maintain evidence that can then be used in court to secure convictions. So this is one of the areas in which Canada has been working as Mr. Reeder referred to in his statement.
We've been working with an NGO out of Vancouver called the Justice Education Society, which has worked with the police and the attorney general's office, with specially vetted units. There's always the worry about passing certain capacities on to a corrupt police force. You have to be careful about that, so they're working with specially vetted units to increase their capacity through things like video surveillance and wiretapping to be able to gather evidence and maintain it and use it in court proceedings and so on.
This is done through training and also through the purchase of such equipment as an integrated ballistics identification system, an IBIS machine, which uses readings to detect ballistics, thereby increasing the evidence-gathering capacity in order to secure convictions.