Thank you very much.
On a more general note, just a few days ago the UN Periodic Review came out with a report. Part of what was made public were submissions by 20 countries. These are countries that we look to as common-minded countries: Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, and the list goes on. All of those 20 countries expressed real concern about what Canada is not doing when it comes to violence against indigenous women. Ireland, in particular, raised the issue of listening to the families and communities that are calling for a national inquiry. This has reached the point where we've got Human Rights Watch reports; CIDA has raised this issue, and now we have the UN Periodic Review. It's like this room here is in another world. The global community has joined so many people in our own country asking what is going on in Canada.
How do you reconcile this? We've heard about the silos and the need to work better together. We've heard all of these things. How do you reconcile that disconnect, or can you reconcile the disconnect? It sounds like they're talking about a different country, compared to the presentations we're hearing tonight.
Ms. Murphy, maybe we can start with you.