Let me deal with it in parts.
In terms of what happens if we don't have a trade agreement, we can look at what's there now. There are trade and investment arrangements. Canadian business has interests in Colombia. Canadian mining has very significant interests in Colombia. Presumably that will go on.
So it's not a question of either having a trade deal or no commercial ties and trade arrangements with Colombia. Plainly those are capable of standing on their own two feet without the extra incentive of a trade agreement.
You mentioned FARC. Please treat them as included in all of the grievous challenges I've just described. The problem with the political discourse in Colombia is that there are citizens trying to carve out a middle way, a path of moderation and democracy, and space for participation. They're getting it from both ends, and it's not a pretty picture.
I think Mr. Neve has very ably described how that looks in practice. There is no--no--real signal that this is on its way to substantive change. You can take some paramilitaries out of the game, but the system in which they are organized remains fully intact. That is the challenge here. There is no signal whatever that the system has been taken apart.