I can add a little about the labour issue. Over the summer there were some misunderstandings about a change to labour legislation that the government passed. There were protests. There was a little bit of violence. Everyone was quite concerned. I remember talking to the Panamanian ambassador about this at the time.
Since then, because of these protests by civil society, by labour unions, and by environmental groups, they sat down over 90 days, actually sat down at the table—government officials, the deputy minister of labour and workforce development, the deputy director of the social security fund, and various other members of civil society, as well as the leaders of the Workers Confederation of the Republic of Panama—and they solved this issue together.
There were issues they did not like about law 30. It basically made union fees voluntary rather than automatically deducted from workers' paycheques. In the event of a strike, it allowed employers to replace the strikers with new workers. There were some serious issues that the labour unions didn't like.
They brought these to the table, and all of these issues were basically rescinded. Those aspects of the law have gone. They are working on rephrasing the law and repassing it, and that should be solved very soon.