Sure. Thank you for the question.
The most important stakeholders in this, I think, are all the women and girls and people who are struggling in Afghanistan and who need help. It would be placing them at the heart of the discussion, finding solutions on how we as Canadians can reach them, and making sure that we can be that bridge in a trustworthy way for generous Canadian donors.
I think I can speak for all 19 of the organizations represented here. These are sophisticated operations. It's not the only context where we've dealt with a similar situation. In terms of the policies, the judgments and the expertise that has been gained, I think that sometimes the perception that a significant diversion of funds will happen to the government is overblown. In this example, because I looked into it, only 3% of the funds were going as taxes to the government. I think that's reasonable. We didn't feel that there was an undue influence or that there was an undue diversion of funds to the Taliban government.
If the onus is put on the agencies to make that judgment call and more than 50% to 60% was going to the Taliban, I don't think any of the agencies would proceed in getting that access.