I'm pleased to see your response to that, because there are at times, when governmental organizations from outside a country like that tend to delude themselves. You seem to be paying pretty strict attention to the efforts.
In the Aguan there has been over 100 murders since 2009. One of the concerns that people have raised with us is the way the president has militarized the police. He seems to have taken it up a notch and made it more like the armed forces. There are accusations of abuses by them and private security—I see you're well aware of it—to the point where the International Finance Corporation, the private arm of the World Bank, was reassessing a $30-million loan to a corporation.
It's troubling, but your sense of some optimism is probably a good thing for us to hear. The hard part for me is balancing it against what people have told us from on the ground. There were a number of things I was going to ask about. With respect to the efforts of the Canadian government, in recent times we've been under certain constraints here financially. Have they been fully funded? Is there anything lacking from the sense of financial stability people need for the long-term planning? You're referencing the fact that this is going to take years.