Thank you very much.
The Chinese government has been responding to the world starting to criticize the institution of colonial boarding schools. We have noticed that, after the United Nations sent a communication to Beijing, after seeing news of hearings being held in the U.S. Congress, and now in the Canadian Parliament, the Chinese government is really taking this issue seriously.
Contrary to the wrong conventional wisdom that the Chinese government doesn't care about what the world thinks—nothing will move Beijing, they're too powerful, they won't budge—contrary to all of that, Beijing actually cares a lot. They have been responding from the highest levels, writing in their own media channels about this issue and trying to fight us back.
That's why they're trying to come up with all of these fictitious arguments about why Tibetans should be in boarding schools, and why the Tibetan language is not adequate for learning math and science. If there is continued building of more pressure from the world, from governments, from various organizations, I think it is possible for the Chinese government to budge and to change its behaviour and to change its policy.
We've been hearing whispers that in some small places, in some counties in Tibet, there seem to be new changes on the ground. There is some reversal of policies that are not written, that are not completely official yet, but there is some adaptation and change happening on the ground. We see these as signs that, if the world takes action, we can actually change China's behaviour.