Thank you very much for the question.
I just want to address very briefly Canada's foreign policy. Canada is running for a seat at the UN Human Rights Council in 2028. Canada's record in this area will come under intense scrutiny—just to put that on the table—and that is part of the reason why we feel there's such urgency to address these issues.
In terms of civil society participation in other countries, I can say from my experience.... My first UPR was in Ireland, where I was fortunate enough to work with a broad coalition of organizations for Ireland's first UPR. That process involved multiple engagements with the government over the whole cycle of the UPR. Well before the national report was written, there was clustered engagement around thematic issues. There was resourcing for civil society. There was not only a report back on what we heard, but actual engagement, dialogue and discussion about what the challenges were that the government was facing in implementation, and what the lived experience was of the people subject to human rights violations.
For some of the other examples from other countries, in Paraguay, they have this publicly available database of all the recommendations Paraguay has received, not only from the UPR but from different treaty bodies. There's a publicly available database in which you can see where different recommendations have been implemented, and civil society can also contribute to that.
In terms of—