Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to support what my colleague Ms. Bennett said about international aid organizations. They are fundamentally opposed to the militarization of aid. They see it as a very dangerous way of delivering aid and feel that it puts the recipients in a very dangerous situation. If they're seen to be receiving aid from military personnel, it puts them more at risk from the opposition side. That's the reason they're so opposed to it. They also feel it puts them more at risk—the aid organizations themselves are more at risk—if they're seen to be tied in any way to a military force.
I imagine it would be against some kind of international law for soldiers to disguise themselves, which is what it would be. I think that would be a really dangerous kind of thing, just to put that out on the table.
I want you to know that this committee is going to write a report from the information we've heard from witnesses. You spoke earlier about how you felt there should be an emergency task force led by a special envoy. You talked about the dire need for emergency food and aid—right now, not bogged down in too many bureaucratic muddles about it—and the food needing to get there and get there immediately.
I'm wondering whether you could, and this is probably the last opportunity, reiterate, or tell us exactly—help us with how we write this report—what specific recommendations you would make to this committee on this.