Certainly. As I said, corrective action has been taken. We're more vigilant. Various departments on both sides of the Pacific are involved. I can say that when I was ambassador to Indonesia, foreign countries other than Canada were exporting plastic garbage, against regulations, to Indonesia, so this is a practice that, unfortunately, has occurred. This controversy, this problem, has resulted in people paying much more attention to the issue, so I don't see any risk of this further approaching.
I can say that Canada has a very positive profile—one of the best I've seen—here in the Philippines in terms of its corporate social responsibility and our companies here right across the board in services and in goods production. Some are moving here. Businesses under the “China plus one” strategy, which includes an operation in China but also a second operation somewhere else in the ASEAN, often choose the Philippines because of its labour force and its democracy.
It's good to see that on human rights—for example, gender equality and LGBTQI rights—relative to other countries, being in a democracy with a strong NGO sector and a vibrant media, Canadian companies are functioning here quite successfully without any of those types of issues. That was a bad case, but lessons have been learned from it, and there's been no further—