Yes, I have complained several times to my colleague, the Canadian ambassador in Panama, and I keep telling him that I don't understand why the Department of Foreign Affairs has this advisory.
But, yes, there seems to be a lot of sensitivity. Panama falls at the lowest level of the degrees of danger, as we don't have that high a degree of criminality. But they cannot put us in another category; we have to stay in the one we're in, because they cannot find another category for us. Anyway, you'll be travelling there and will definitely see that this degree of criminality does not exist.
I represent my country and cannot talk about other countries. So I won't talk about other countries, other than to say that I could compare the capital of my country with other capitals in Latin America where there's more criminality. And I can tell you that any of the tourists who have gone to Panama will tell you that things are fine. I don't think there has been any case in the five charter flights, carrying 340 passengers each, of anybody being unable to return because they were attacked or assaulted or murdered, or who didn't somehow return with their charter. On the contrary, lots of people have stayed behind because they wanted to retire in Panama, and people haven't left because they were vandalized in Panama—and that's my opinion.