If I could start with the previous question, I want to add to Oleksandra's words.
Most of the population of Ukraine sees on TV the propaganda that Kyiv is already Russian, that Kharkiv is already Russian and that Russia is everywhere in Ukraine and holds the cities.
At the same time, there is opposition to the Russian government. Most Ukrainian Tatars are very afraid that they will be mobilized to the Russian army to fight with Ukraine right now, and they are looking for different possibilities. They are supported by Ukrainian authorities in looking for different possibilities to escape this duty.
Also Crimea now, unexpectedly, became the road for some people from the Kherson region who are stuck in occupation to escape, so they are moving from Crimea to Georgia, Armenia and Turkey.
As we've already said, a lot of people from Mariupol and the Donetsk and Luhansk regions are also trying to escape through Russia. Some of them are successful, and they sometimes appear in those countries without any documents. Some of them are not successful, because Russia takes all of their documents away and forces them to move to concentration camps.
Canada could probably advocate on this with international organizations like the Red Cross and others and also try to return those people or take them to a safer place to restore, not only their dignity but also their citizenship.
To the other question you asked, I think Canada provides a lot of humanitarian support to Ukraine, and we are super-appreciative of this. As we stated before, what we really need is some support of your own supports. What I mean is that some humanitarian trucks full of humanitarian aid have never reached their destinations because of Russians attacking humanitarian trucks and convoys, stealing them very often and then giving them as their own humanitarian aid to citizens of Mariupol.
If that humanitarian aid had some bigger support accompanied by some international organizations or some ministers of foreign affairs of Canada or other countries, it would be a really great support, because it's not only the humanitarian aid that is needed so greatly in Ukraine now, but also help to deliver it to those who need it most right now, including in occupied territories that have no medicine in the drugstores at all because there is nothing coming from Russia or Ukraine. In the Kherson region, they don't have medicine, and there is no possibility—no Russian government will—to provide those medicines there. There should be some pressure on them, not only from Ukraine but from other countries.