Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Just by way of starting, I want to thank the witnesses. I obviously express complete solidarity with the efforts that everyone is making with respect to Ukraine. We stand in solidarity with Ukraine against this unjust and illegal invasion by Russia.
I also want to correct, for the record, a bit about sanctions, which came up during the previous hour. There was an implication made that sanctions haven't “slowed down” the Russian regime. The actual evidence we've heard at this committee shows that the Russian ruble is falling, inflation is soaring, interest rates are climbing and the entire economy is collapsing. I don't think we're seeing protests in the streets in Russia by Russian citizens because protests of that nature can result in jail time, based on Putin's authoritarianism.
I'm going to split my time with Mr. Sheehan, Madam Chair.
I want to put a question to Mr. Markevych.
Mr. Markevych, I want to ask you about the issue you raised about needing more investments. You talked about how CUFTA had been assisting you, in particular, in your work with your consulting operation.
We heard from the former ambassador of Ukraine to Canada at the last meeting about harnessing not just people-to-people ties, but specifically the IT capacity in Ukraine. I'm wondering if you have an opinion on that as part of the expansion in services trade that you mentioned, specifically in the area of cybersecurity.
I'll go over to you, Mr. Markevych. Thank you. Dyakuyu.