There are several things here. First and foremost, Canada has been helping us with, I think, $29 million regarding Yemen just in the past two years. Canada has really helped us in the area of school children, with nutrition, with lactating and pregnant women and especially with little girls. Canada has been great.
Long term, there is a whole different dynamic here. Let me add that—notwithstanding the war coming to an end; obviously, that's the best solution—the problem you have now is that you cannot solve the humanitarian crisis with a humanitarian solution. It is too great. You must inject liquidity into the marketplace. We have a group of economists on our teams because economies determine food prices and food prices determine civil unrest. We know this stuff.
I took my number one economist with me into Yemen. We met with the governor of the Central Bank of Yemen, along with other leaders of the country, like the Government of Yemen and the de facto leaders in other places. We explained to them that this was no longer a humanitarian solution alone, that there must be an injection of approximately $200 million U.S. of liquidity into the marketplace, and how that needs to be done to stabilize the rial. The rial needs to come back down to somewhere below 450:1 to create economic viability again in the marketplace, because 90% of the food and supplies for Yemen come from the outside world. There's no longer any economy on the inside, so they can't grow their own food. They can't provide their own supplies. It is a disaster.