That is my concern here. When do you decide to act? Do you wait for local indigenous groups to complain, or do you take proactive steps?
One example is Barrick Gold, which has the Veladero mine in Argentina. It's coincidentally owned jointly by Shandong Gold of China. They've had three or more major spills of cyanide, mercury and arsenic into the local rivers. Local people have been complaining. The UN special rapporteur on human rights and the environment, David Boyd, who's from the University of British Columbia, put out a letter on this.
I wonder, does that get you...? What do you do when you hear about that, and why haven't you heard about it? Shouldn't you be reaching out to these people and saying you'd like to hear the details on this? It seems remarkable that the United Nations has taken the time to put out a report, yet you have not done anything on this, apparently.