Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I want to correct something Mr. Martin said. It's unfair of him to say I didn't want this meeting to go ahead, this particular investigation. That's completely unfair.
If I gave him that impression, he's mistaken, because it's quite the contrary. The majority has ruled this process will proceed, and we'll proceed. We abide by the majority of this committee.
The point I made at the subcommittee, since it appears that everything at the subcommittee is now going to be revealed, my position then and my position now—if you read the motion: “That, if possible, the Committee begin on Thursday, May 17, 2007, its study of the Department of Foreign Affairs internal report “Afghanistan 2006: Good Governance, Democratic Development and Human Rights” in relation to Access to Information requests for the document.”
As far as the witnesses who are here today are concerned, I'm pleased they're here and I look forward to hearing what they have to say. Other witnesses were suggested by the committee, and I know other names will be suggested to the committee. We expect a full investigation of this matter, a complete investigation. If there were any violations of the legislation, I think, according to the motion, this committee will try to find out.
The first thing we have to do, though, is this. We're studying a report. I've never seen it. We've seen page one in The Globe and Mail--“one” blacked out, and I don't know whether that was the report or whether that wasn't the report. The Globe and Mail said it was the report. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't. Witnesses may come and say they have the report. That's not good enough for me either. I want to see some representative from the government come forward, or at least the clerk report to us that the clerk has the report. This was given to him by a government official, and he presents it to us.
The subcommittee did give the clerk instructions to do that. I assume he's gone off. I think it was made quite clear to us that it's going to be very difficult to get a clean copy of the report. I suppose anything's possible, but without a great brouhaha it's unlikely we'll get the clean copy of the report.
The committee then gave the clerk instructions to get the report where portions aren't blacked out. I accept that. I don't imagine he's got it today, because part of the reason is that it has to be translated. I accept that too.
Quite frankly, I think that calling witnesses before we see even the blacked-out portion of the report is preposterous. Witnesses are—