Thank you, Madame Chair.
If possible, I would like to split my time with Mr. Fergus, if we're able to do that.
Thank you to both of you for testifying today.
I have one question, and it's for Mr. Bastard.
We've touched on this already in some ways, but I think it will be good for the record to reflect in the end, when we do produce a report, how things have changed over the decades. My specific point is that reporting in the context of mass violence, genocide in fact, is not new. There were reporters covering Rwanda. There were reporters covering the killing fields in Cambodia and other situations like those. I wonder how social media has impacted the reporting of situations like genocide that the Rohingya have gone through, or if not outright genocide, then certainly instances of mass violence. Is social media helping or hindering the reporting and exposing of violence that's taking place on the ground? That could be in Burma, if you wish to use it as an example. It's a general question, so you can give us a general answer.