Chair, I can speak to members about the last part of your comment. There is no doubt that the drug trade is an issue, not just in Honduras but in Central America.
I don't know if your previous witnesses have talked about this, but Honduras has weak institutions. Whether on the judicial side, whether on the government side, Honduras has weak institutions. When you have weak institutions, you are inevitably getting into the challenging areas that the member has talked about. That is in great part the situation we're facing in Honduras and in other parts of Central America.
The focus of our programming, the focus of what Canada intends or wants to achieve in Honduras, is the strengthening of those institutions and the strengthening of the capacity of officials in those institutions to conduct their work. This is where it starts. It starts at the local level and it starts at the national level where Honduras institutions need to be strengthened, and that's the focus of our programming.
I can't comment as to why you haven't talked about the drug trade around this table, but it is certainly a significant issue in Honduras and neighbouring countries.