I might just say that there is a qualitative difference between some countries on the planet that are engaging daily in state-sponsored repression of human rights, etc.—and you may have named some of them—and a country like Honduras.
The human rights issues and the problems associated with violence that you have described, in my experience when I was there, were not state-sponsored, directed by the government with orders from the top to “arrest my political opponents”, etc. This is simply not the situation in Honduras.
It has a different set of challenges. It is generalized violence. It is particularly driven by narco-trafficking, which is verging on being out of control in the region. It is a very serious concern, and it is for that reason that Canada and its like-minded partners, I should emphasize—the United States, the European Union, the Japanese, the Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank—are together, as the major donors in the country, engaging with that government to try to address these challenges. This includes our free trade policy, and it is likewise with the U.S. and EU.