I will just add a few points.
We are of the view that the Rwandan genocide has had a really profound impact on the way Canada and the international community actually provide humanitarian assistance now and how we go about protecting crisis-affected populations, including women and girls.
You may know that after the genocide, there was the first ever multi-donor evaluation of the international humanitarian response. It was the single most comprehensive system-wide evaluation of an international response at the time. It found many weaknesses and strengths in the humanitarian system around the areas of early warning, coordination, accountability, protection of civilians, security of humanitarian workers, as well as the provision of relief. That triggered quite a transformation in the international humanitarian system. There has also been a whole range of far-reaching efforts to professionalize the humanitarian system itself and the workers. We saw, for instance, the creation of what we call the Sphere standards, which is a set of universal minimum standards that are there to try to improve the quality of humanitarian assistance that's provided, as well as the accountability of humanitarian actors.
Very importantly, then we saw the creation of a code of conduct for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and NGOs in disaster relief. There are also a couple of other landmark elements that have arisen. While you might not be able to trace a direct link back to the post-genocide response, that really did lead to a lot of transformations in the system that we see today.
It also led to and was part and parcel of why today Canada requires our partners to be signatories to this Red Cross code of conduct, why they follow the guidelines for gender-based violence interventions in humanitarian settings, and why they have gender policies. They have to report back to us when they receive grant funding from the Government of Canada. It's led to more studies on the need to protect women and girls in humanitarian settings and why they've created protection mechanisms out there such as a thing called GenCap, which is a surge capacity, in that they can draw upon a pool of candidates when there is a gap in the humanitarian response. That type of tool exists.
I also want to say that we're also very, very vocal in all of the multilateral settings where Canada sits as a board member or a member state to the UN or with regard to our other partners that have donor support groups. We are one of the most vocal on the need to ensure that policies are engendered and that, if there is not enough awareness through their programming and their policies about gender-based violence.... Many of the partners have moved there because of Canadian stances in these international fora.