Thank you for this question, which is fundamentally a development question, and a very important one.
As we have discussed today, following the genocide the role of the international community was initially very much a reaction to the immediate consequences of the genocide, but it very quickly transformed into addressing the fundamental needs of any nation, such as ongoing health care systems, not just emergency health care, education systems, public transport, judicial systems. All of those issues have been supported through Canadian bilateral programming in the years following the genocide.
As you are surely aware, Canada no longer has a bilateral development program with Rwanda following decisions by the government to focus development assistance on fewer partners. However, for many years following the genocide, Canada was an important bilateral partner of Rwanda and invested very heavily in a wide range of programs, including addressing health care issues, judicial issues around reconciliation, land use and land tenure issues, the whole range of the tissue of a society that is necessary for moving out of a post-genocide period into a period of normality.
Those kinds of initiatives continue now with some support from Canada through the United Nations family of organizations—our core contributions, for example—and through one ongoing project where we work through the World Bank, as well as the CECI project that I mentioned earlier.