That is quite important. Thank you for bringing that to the discussion.
A lot of times you get a project where its two years, three years or four years. These four-year projects are not going to deliver very much in terms of human rights. You have to have at least a 20-year policy that you dish out in a smaller but coherent way, so that we see the results at the end.
Those are very important. Also, there's combining economic supports with human rights issues, especially the rights of minorities, whether they're sexual minorities, religious minorities or racial minorities. Those are very important issues. In different countries those tend to be the most excluded groups of people. If you can protect their human rights, you can basically protect everybody else's human rights.
Often, not just in Canada but elsewhere, in the development project we separate human rights as politics and development as economic development, while these two should be hand in hand. They work together better if they are combined and in coherence with one another.
That's what we really wish to see in Canada to set an example for the rest of the feminist governments.