I do think the work that you're describing is vitally important. I've often felt that if we look at who the front line of democracy is, it is legislators. It is elected members of various parliaments. We know that authoritarian forces are working globally. If we, as legislators, as the front line, aren't working globally, then we won't be able to proceed, so I think this is very important.
My second question, if I have time, Mr. Chair, is about gender. I've done a lot of work, before politics, internationally on women in politics. We know that women, especially women who are legislators, face different kinds of attacks. They face sexual violence, attacks on their families. Do you find in your reports—I noted that you divide them by gender—that the nature of the threats and the nature of the human rights abuses that female parliamentarians are facing are different from men? How are you tracking that?