—Professor Rowena He, who was denied a visa.
She was an educator at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She was denied a return visa in November 2023. I haven't heard a statement from any government minister about her case. The most prominent, I would say, Canadian academic, specifically on Tiananmen Square and the public's relationship with the stories and the history of it, is denied a visa, fired from her job—unfairly, I would say—denied the ability to keep telling the story of Tiananmen Square in the context of Hong Kong, obviously, and how important the story is, and teaching and educating those—but obviously from a Canadian perspective.
Don't you find it's interesting that the government hasn't said anything, and hasn't intervened in her case? There's been no communication. All in the Indo-Pacific strategy, if we're exchanging a people-to-people connection, you would think the Canadian government would do more to protect Canadian academics who are going overseas to spread the Canadian message that we can speak freely and we can share sometimes tough messages and share our stories and our perspectives on history.
You have a very unique perspective, Professor, so I want to hear it from you. What do you think the government should do on a case like Professor Rowena He?