Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Madam Lynch, and your fellow workers.
I am interested as well in some of the things the Israelis talked about. Here you suggest that profiles appropriately constructed could potentially reduce the number of individuals identified for further screening. But what the Israelis do is actually identify a number of people who don't need screening; they have trusted traveller cards. They've identified about 50% of the travellers through a process using a machine with a pre-set series of questions. The machine determines the appropriateness of the person for getting the trusted traveller card.
Do you see that as a system that would be easy to monitor for human rights issues? Plus, you have the choice of either stepping into the machine and getting a trusted traveller card or not. So how does that impact on human rights issues for any of the travellers?