Thank you very much. I have the floor.
This individual could have used that area, in terms of the advice section of the exemption, to make a determination, which this person likely makes, if not daily, then weekly, on the documentation this department gets.
I'm with you. We're going to need to make sure that this was the right decision to be made, but we're not the body to make that decision. You need to wait until the Information Commissioner decides whether the person made the right choices or not, but you're trying to pre-empt that with this motion. By pre-empting that with this motion, I don't think we'll get to the answers we're looking for on this particular item.
I think, based on the motion that was put on the floor first, that if we had waited for that individual...and I even amended it, or had somebody else amend it, to make it “current” issues. A colleague of mine from the other side mentioned that if this proceeds for years, then we don't get an answer; I said “current”. It wasn't even a concession. It's what I actually meant: that the current ATI applications that were in would be reviewed and we would get an answer quickly.
I think the sitting chair now made a point that this could go on forever, and so on and so forth. He made a suggestion on a date. We put that forward. That didn't pass either, but I did appreciate his suggestion.
So I'm very, very concerned about the section of the act, in terms of exemptions and operations of government on the advice piece, that plans could clearly have been outlined in this regard. Now, even if the plans aren't word for word in the documentation, there still is a possibility that people could read the documentation and make their own plans against Canadians or against the Government of Afghanistan, based on the information they had.
Again, my guess is that there is probably a nucleus of what the next steps might be, because rarely do you get a report like this that wouldn't have some sense of where we go next. If it's just an analysis of how things are going, democracy, the number of seats they have, how many prisons they have, how many countries are there helping, how much new water has been developed, I can absolutely guarantee you that type of report would have no blacked-out sections, because there would be no exceptions that would have been applied. The operations of good governance would not have been applied. The responsibility we have for the safety of individuals would not have been applied. Clearly, our responsibility as a government on international defence in sections 15 and 17 would not have been applied.
So, obviously, this likely report, which I have never seen because it's blacked out, may have that kind of information in it, and that is clearly set out in the act.
In addition, under “Advice”, if the record came into existence fewer than 20 years prior to the request--