I don't want to cut you off, but I have a lot of questions. But anyway, thanks. So that's still there.
We talked about the Congo. It strikes me that ending the war and then having a democratic government with better health care and trade and better farming and food security would be equally important goals. And if abortion was the only matter that would solve all the world's problems with respect to that, then the recommendations of the MDG Africa Steering Group might be a bit different than they were.
I note that in their report they state...and I'm going to mention some of the things they talked about. They talk about cost-effective strategies and their technologies for the green revolution that can double per hectare yields among smaller farms in a shorter period of time. This is Africa that we're specifically talking about. They also talk about the need to improve crop and livestock husbandry and to adopt sustainable land and water management practices. They talk about a particular challenge, which is the need to reduce donor fragmentation and to channel financing more effectively. They talk about high agricultural commodity prices as being an opportunity for African nations to enter into the field of exporting some of their crops so their economies could grow. They talk about how important it is for developing nations to have trade opportunities and that other nations, particularly in the west, seize those opportunities.
We know that in this Parliament we've been debating the Canada-Colombia free trade agreement that would see us having an ability to trade with a poorer nation and to help some of those poor farmers. That was filibustered by one of the parties here.
They talk about the importance of genetically modified seeds that can resist drought that would help farmers in those areas farm better and have greater yields, which would lead to--