Some of them have been addressed. And they are currently working on trying to address some of the other ones. Even if they address all of them, there is still a problem of politics, because the UN missions are mandated by the United Nations Security Council, which is all about politics. So you can still have a problem with that.
But I think it has become a norm, and partly also because of responsibility to protect being built into the UN document of 2005. Almost every United Nations peace operation now includes a protection of civilians mandate. So I think that creates an opening, and it can be further influenced by governments like the Government of Canada and the other governments that have credibility across the board within the United Nations, and not only in one segment of the community of the United Nations.
Lots more work needs to be done through the United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations. But if you only have Bangladeshis and Indians engaging with them, and you don't have the governments like Canada and the military like the Canadian military, which has so much experience and so much training to offer and so on, I'm not sure how well these issues will be addressed.