Thank you, Mr. Chair, and to all of you at the table, thank you very much, Ambassador, ministers, and all those who have come.
One of the things that impressed me when we travelled to Colombia to meet with President Uribe and other members of your cabinet, Minister, was what they were attempting to do, which was to deal with the transparency issue. I know we talk about all these things we're talking about now that have been challenges, but I think the reality is that President Uribe has created the environment in which you're trying to create some transparency and you're trying to make sure your government is accountable. As a result of that, I realize that there have been people who have been brought forward, and so on. I don't think we should condemn a government for trying to be transparent and for people then being able to see those kinds of things happen.
I have a very quick one before I get to my questions. You have 11 agreements in place. How many of them actually have all these separate agreements on labour and human rights and the environment? Are we the first one? You have other opportunities to trade with other partners. I guess my question is whether you have all these sidebar agreements with the other people you trade with, the other countries you trade with. You're looking at 49 additional ones. With the 11 you're trading with right now, do you have all these particular sidebar agreements on human rights, labour, and the environment, or is this something relatively new for Colombia?