In the case of Venezuela, we actually have a member of the committee who is from Venezuela. She gives us some heart-rending stories of how she effectively has to escape from the country. She fears she'll be arrested if she leaves Venezuela to go to the plenary sessions we used to hold pre-COVID, and getting back into her country is difficult.
Despite not being able to visit Venezuela, we have done regular reports. I'm trying to think of the number of MPs involved, but I think it would be in excess of 100 members of Parliament who are on the list of the investigation into that specific country.
We do make a substantial report to the plenary session. David McGuinty, correct me—there would be 600, 700 or 800 people who would be at the plenary sessions. They are hearing of the abuses that are occurring, not that it's not public knowledge, but the session that we give to the major plenary session certainly reveals the difficulty that we're having in getting proper information. Furthermore, it shows the difficulty that those opposition MPs are having in a—well, it's no longer a democracy; it's a dictatorship, isn't it?