Well, I'm not going to speak for the department. Let me go back and address some of the allegations that you raised.
You mentioned that the Lobo government took office illegally in 2009. The position of the Government of Canada, like that of the United States, the European Union, and other industrialized countries, is that the election through which President Lobo took office was legitimate. We recognized that government and worked with them—and it wasn't just us. Other western countries did as well. We worked with them to conclude a free trade agreement. We also worked with them to implement programming with respect to development, cooperation, and security.
Frankly, Honduras is a country that suffers from all of the things that the member described: the cancer of narco-trafficking, violence in the region that is bordering on out of control, serious human rights concerns. It's for that reason that the Government of Canada, along with other like-minded governments, is working with the Government of Honduras to try to address these issues, both directly and through tools like the negotiation, in our case, of a free trade agreement, which the United States and the European Union also have in force with Honduras.