Mr. Toews, we heard in the last round of the review of the ATA very strong concerns from charities—these aren't suspect charities, but the Red Cross, UNICEF—and their being very concerned about their charitable status because they are caught in an emergency situation.
Let me take the most recent one, the Pakistan earthquake. If they were in there, they might in fact run into some al-Qaeda. They might very well do that in the region where it was, on the frontier in Pakistan. And they were very clear.
We didn't hear this from any of the officials who came in front of us. In fact, if the election hadn't intervened, we were going to demand that those officials come back, because they didn't tell us about the problem. But we had a number of very significant charities who were worried.
I would suggest, sir, that you could you look at that and maybe go back to look at the evidence we took at that time. They are very concerned about their status. At times they think they have made decisions to not help in providing humanitarian relief out of fear that they might be charged and have their charitable status lifted.