What I was saying before you posed the second question--and I'll return to answering in the sequence I had in mind--is that the further evidence is the nature of the excisions that have been made.
To take an example, the very first sentence of paragraph one of this document--which has been excised, ostensibly on the legal authority of subsection 15(1)--reads: “Despite some positive developments, the overall human rights situation in Afghanistan deteriorated in 2006.”
That sentence cannot possibly, in my opinion as a professor of law and from reading the law, be justified under subsection 15(1).
I'll give you another example. The next excision, later in the same paragraph, is cut. This is what it said before it was cut: “Extra judicial executions, disappearances, torture and detention without trial are all too common. Freedom of expression still faces serious obstacles, there are serious deficiencies in adherence to the rule of law and due process by police and judicial officials. Impunity remains a problem in the aftermath of three decades of war and much needed reforms of the judiciary systems remain to be implemented.”
Nothing, sir, about that passage possibly falls within the ambit of subsection 15(1)--