Thank you very much.
We do. As a matter of fact, the Commission pour la recherche d'une solution haïtienne à la crise, which I am honoured to be a member of and which is included in the Bureau de suivi de l'accord de Montana, includes the voodoo religion and the Episcopal church. The Fédération protestante d'Haïti was in it for quite a long time. It was in for over a year and a half, practically, and then left a few months ago.
We have done consistent, systematic outreach with the Catholic church. What we have been told by the Catholic church, when we met with them at different times, is that they follow what we're doing, but they do not want to be directly involved in finding a solution. They had, in a way, been burnt already. They already tried to do that, and the outcome was not favourable for them.
We believe churches—whether they're Catholic, Protestant, Episcopalian or of the voodoo religion—are important to the solution. Some of them are already part of the commission and the Montana accord. The question would be, can the Catholic church be a broker? Can it come in as a supporter or mediator? We do not know.
We insist it is extremely important that the different denominations be part of the solution. Some already are part of the greater consensus. What role the Catholic church will decide to play.... That's the one that is absent, along with the Fédération protestante d'Haïti. We aim to start re-dialoguing with them. We believe they are essential.