--public health or environmental regulations and so forth.
Having not read those provisions of the Canada-Jordan FTA, I can't speak to those, other than to note that in the United States we've been working on those issues. I note many similarities between the trade agreements that the U.S. has negotiated and those that Canada has negotiated. So to the extent that investment in intellectual property and services procurement provisions...again, it's just to know that those can have a substantial impact on the citizenry of a country that engages in trade with another country.
With regard to the 2006 exposé, it was something the national labour committee, through research in Jordan, followed up by the AFL-CIO submitting a complaint under the U.S.-Jordan free trade agreement, tried to raise: the issue of very severe worker rights violations in the qualified industrial zones. As my colleague Mr. Wilcke has referred to already, there were very unsanitary working conditions, forced labour in the form of withholding of passports of migrant workers, substantive--