Thank you.
Thank you, Ambassador, for being here with us today. In many ways, I envy you. Ecuador is one of my favourite countries, and I have dreamed, several times in my life, of spending more time there and living there for extended periods. I have not had that opportunity, though, so I envy you.
I just want to follow on with what Monsieur Savard-Tremblay was talking about.
There seems to be a pattern of.... First of all, we have Canada as a major investor in Ecuador, and it seems the major part of that investment is in mining. Canada's big interests in the country, and presumably in this free trade agreement, revolve around that fact.
We have a history in Ecuador of a previous government basically tearing up all its free trade agreements that had investor-state dispute mechanisms in there, because it had bad experiences with them. They tried to change human rights legislation or environmental legislation, and they ended up being sued by those companies and facing very hefty damages, so they said, “We want to have that sovereignty back. We're going to get rid of that. It's in the constitution that you can't do that.”
I asked this of a previous witness. We have, in one sense, Canada saying that we need this investor-state dispute mechanism in here to protect, I would argue, largely, our mining companies that are active there, because they don't want a government in the future to say, “Actually, we want to protect our people. We want to protect our environment.” However, we're going to have, I'm sure, chapters in this agreement that say we have to protect human rights, the environment, labour laws and women.
I just have real trouble squaring that circle whereby we're in one sense trying to protect Canadian companies that have had—and I don't think you can dispute this—a very checkered past with regard to human rights and the environment and trying to have a modern free trade agreement that seems to be trying to do both things at once.
I don't know if that's too broad a question, but help me understand what the Canadian priorities are here. Are we going to protect the people of Ecuador, or are we going to protect Canadian mining companies?
I'm sorry. I'll just let you answer.