Thank you, Mr. Allison.
To your first comment--and I appreciate that you have seen the effort in transparency in Colombia--I would say that these days there are people in jail who would not have been in jail under previous governments. There are lots of people in jail, you will know, who are friends of the government. They're still in jail, and they'll be convicted if it is proven that they've committed crimes, be it human rights, be it lack of transparency, or be it vote buying or whatever it is. Those people are in jail. That never happened in Colombia. Impunity was complete. People are in jail these days, and they're paying for it.
To your second point, in most trade agreements we have there are chapters on human rights or there are chapters on labour or chapters on the environment. But with Canada it's a special agreement, because not only do we have a chapter, for instance, on labour as part of the agreement, but we also have a separate agreement on labour cooperation. And we have a separate agreement on the environment. It makes it much more robust in the case of Canada. We don't have that with other agreements. Also in the case of Canada, we have this new agreement to report on human rights issues both to the Colombian Congress and to the Canadian Parliament. This is something we don't have in other agreements, and this is something particular about Canada that makes this agreement special and makes it stronger, of course.