Thank you.
As you have so rightly pointed out, there are two side agreements to the FTA. One is to protect the environment and the other one has to do with labour cooperation. We have to take into account those issues when it comes to the development of the country. You also have to take into account the human rights needs and the labour issues of the local population. In that sense, we believe that those agreements, which are part of the FTA but are side agreements, are binding, and as a result we must comply with them exactly, like the Canadian part.
In terms of the dialogue, as I said, our government focused on mediation through the evangelical and Catholic churches in order to promote dialogue. I'd like to point out that the evangelical churches and the Catholic churches have a lot of influence among indigenous populations, because quite often they provide social assistance through schools or medical assistance to those populations, so they have a lot of influence over these rural populations. In Peru we have a defender of the people, if you will—essentially a Peruvian ombudsman—who is actively involved in this work right now.
Yesterday a memorandum of understanding was signed between the President of the Council of Ministers and the native communities of the centre. We have two points on which we agreed. I will leave you with a binder with the memorandum of understanding that was signed yesterday. I'll also leave you with the names of all the people who died, the people who were injured and where they're being treated in hospitals, the people who have been detained and where they have been detained, the people who have gone back to their place of origin, and the people who have been kept with the religious communities. We'd simply like to show that the Peruvian state fully respects human rights.
Unfortunately, we saw the events of June 5 and 6, as I said in my initial intervention. We've learned from this, and we want to produce a law that will protect the people of the Amazon area. But at the same time, as I said, it's also important to take into account the rights of the 20 million Peruvians who don't all live in the Amazon region.