Thank you very much.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members. Thank you for inviting us to come and have this discussion today.
My name is Steven Kuhn, and I am the associate assistant deputy minister for the international trade and finance branch at Finance Canada. I am accompanied here today by Julie Trépanier, who is the director general for the international finance and development division within our branch.
It's one of my branch's responsibilities to provide oversight of Canada's participation in various multilateral development banks where the Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister of Finance serve as governor. These include the World Bank Group, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the AIIB.
As you know, Canada formally joined the AIIB in early 2018, and the AIIB Agreement Act, an act of Canadian Parliament, defines the Minister of Finance's role as Canadian governor to the AIIB.
Governors in MDBs, multilateral development banks, including this institution, are responsible for making the highest-level decisions in the governance of these institutions. Since joining the AIIB, my branch has also been responsible for Canada's interactions with the AIIB's management, including through representation on the AIIB's board of directors. That board of directors is responsible for providing direction for the bank's general operations, such as approving overall strategies, policies and projects. In this respect, the AIIB's governance structure is largely similar to other multilateral development banks that Canada is a member of, with one caveat being that the AIIB does not have a full-time resident board of directors, as we heard in the previous testimony.
Since inception, the AIIB has had a part-time, non-resident board of directors—largely composed of senior finance officials from the largest AIIB shareholders—that meets on a regular basis, either in person or virtually. For Canada, this has meant that our representative has been a senior official from within the international trade and finance branch at the Department of Finance, based here in Ottawa.
I'll just walk you through some of the timeline of the discussions that we're having today. This representative was informed of the resignation of the AIIB director general for communications, Mr. Bob Pickard, by the AIIB's vice-president and corporate secretary late on the evening of June 13. Department of Finance officials, including Canada's then representative to the board of directors, had previously not been in contact with Mr. Pickard and had not been informed of the issue surrounding his tenure at the AIIB.
I understand that, at around the same time, Mr. Pickard informed our Canadian representative in our embassy in Beijing of his resignation and of his plans to immediately return to Canada. Early on June 14, the Department of Finance learned, through Mr. Pickard's posts on his social media accounts, of his allegations against the AIIB. Mr. Pickard made several observations about the institution, and he has had the opportunity to discuss these with this committee.
Later on that same day, the Deputy Prime Minister issued a public statement immediately halting all Government of Canada activity at the AIIB, instructing departmental officials to lead a review of the allegations raised by Mr. Pickard and of Canada's involvement at the AIIB. Since that time, the department and my branch have been working on this review. The Deputy Prime Minister announced on December 8 that the government is continuing its review of the AIIB in consultation with some of our closest international partners. While this work continues, Canada's participation at the AIIB remains suspended.
This concludes my remarks. Julie and I would be pleased to answer questions that committee members may have. Thank you.