Thank you, Chairman.
Thank you, Mr. Marleau. It's very fitting that you're here today, because I can tell you that some members of this access to information committee are reeling with shock over what we believe to be some of the most egregious and blatant violations of our freedom of information system that we've ever seen exposed publicly. I know you've now received three formal complaints about this same issue, one coming from the NDP, Dawn Black. I have her letter of complaint here.
This is not only the most blatant and serious violation we've seen, but the subject matter is so important, on a national level and international level, because we're being accused of violating the Geneva Convention by some of the information that has been blacked out. It's clear that the government has been busted, with black ink on its fingers, for blacking out sections of this report--36 sections of a 20-page report, all but two under subsection 15(1) of the Access to Information Act, which we supervise.
In your understanding of subsection 15(1), are you allowed to black out basic information such as...? Let me read one line that has been blacked out that we now know is in this report and ask you if you think this would qualify under subsection 15(1). It says here, “military, intelligence and police forces have been accused of involvement in arbitrary arrest, kidnapping extortion, torture and extrajudicial killing” of criminal suspects.
Why would that information fit under the category of subsection 15(1), about international affairs, etc.? Is that the kind of thing that you believe is properly excluded under subsection 15(1)?