There are a couple of things that governments can do. I want to applaud the Government of Canada for working over the years with other interested governments, including the United States government and EU partners, and even Japan, in pushing the human rights issues and concerns about the Rohingya.
The number one thing the Canadian ambassador in Burma can do is to coordinate with other donor governments to press the NLD and the local government of Rakhine to do the things I talked about today, by removing local travel restrictions and those sorts of thing.
At a more specific level, there's a lot the government can do as a donor to coordinate with other donors and promote the latter things I was talking about, including the rule of law. It can can help the government set up rapid response units that can go after people who are engaged in fomenting anti-Muslim violence. It can also pay for some of the new programming the government wants to do that encourages inter-religious dialogues and tries to get the communities together to talk about the logistical grievances and resentments they have and try to sort through them.