I want to say, Ms. Montgomery, that I agreed with your conversation when you first started talking about training journalists, because journalists in many ways are the consciences of countries, especially countries that have gone through this type of horrific set of events.
PTSD is something that's just started to become part of the conversation in North America. I have had it for 40 years. I was a signal maintainer and took care of railway crossings. I had four fatalities in one crossing in 11 months. To this day 40 years later I have a recurring dream, about every month, in which I'm standing before my supervisor trying to explain why I had not tested the crossing appropriately. Actually I had, but there I was, totally innocent, and I still pay for that now. The advantage I had was being able to discuss it with co-workers and other people.
When I look at this situation, you've talked about that peer-to-peer counselling that happens or conversations with somebody who facilitates that. You mentioned an American NGO that was doing some work around that. It strikes me that there are two levels to this. In Hamilton, we marked the anniversary of Rwanda. One young man spoke. He was one of the twentysomethings. Do you have an idea of how many people, how many of these victims, are in Canada? Is this not something we should be providing here, as well as over there? Do you see a particular NGO that might be worthy of the Canadian government helping to facilitate this in Rwanda?