I take a different view of it, because I don't think that solves the problem of getting people here more quickly. Even if you have biometrics and you're in Afghanistan, safe passage is not guaranteed or necessarily made easier by the fact that you've completed biometrics.
The other piece that concerns me is that, if you were to do biometrics in-country, you would lose whatever benefit it provided from a security point of view. We have both domestic and international legal obligations that would prevent the refoulement of someone going back to Afghanistan if they were inadmissible to Canada for security reasons. I don't expect that this is going to be an enormous number of people we're dealing with, but when it's part of the security screening and approval process, I think it's important that we do it before someone arrives in our country.