Thank you.
Mr. Beasley, I am very happy to meet you. This is the first time I am hearing you speak. Everything you talked about is passionate.
I will continue in the same vein as my colleague. Here, in Canada and in Quebec, we are far from the conflict, but there have been a few mentions of a humanitarian corridor being opened in Mariupol, so that people can come out. That seems complicated. Russia said it would open a corridor, but the seven or eight attempts to do so have failed.
Do you know anything about that? What is so complicated, in terms of logistics, about opening a humanitarian corridor in a country at war?