Thank you for being with us, Ms. Harrison.
I was truly touched by an article you wrote in The Globe and Mail a year ago in speaking about the UN's grave failure in Sri Lanka and demanding an answer. You were writing then about how this was “Ban Ki-moon's Rwanda moment” in terms of what occurred there; as you said, it was “a little-reported war three years ago on a tiny Indian Ocean island where tens of thousands of civilians were slaughtered, waiting for the United Nations to come and rescue them”.
My question to you is, what is there from your writing.... I know that elsewhere you speak about this whole investigation on your part and how difficult and painful it is. What is it that you might have learned in your investigation also about what the UN needs to do in terms of the training of its officials, sensitizing them about the responsibility to protect, which they did not appear to appreciate that this was something they were obliged to do?