Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Vincent will be using the last two minutes of my allocated time.
Mr. Attaran, you said earlier that you strongly believed that an inquiry was needed. There is no doubt that an inquiry is called for, but it remains to be seen whether the RCMP will act. By defeating, on a majority vote, all of the subamendments seeking to hold the inquiry in camera, this committee today voted to hold a public inquiry.
If it becomes an RCMP inquiry, we will never know what really happened. As I am sure you will appreciate, what we are doing here today is very important for how this will all play out.
I would like to come back to the fact that some people have something to hide, some people have a guilty conscience. Our Conservative colleagues, amongst others, have done their best to prevent us from speaking with you. Then there is the fact that it was never made clear which paragraphs of subsection 15(1) were being relied upon—that is another anomaly.
When this report was circulated, somebody somewhere must have read it and been shocked by it. There is at least reason to criticize the government, because the report contains information on the torture of Afghan prisoners, a violation of the Geneva Convention. Why did nobody in the department sound the alarm? Why did nobody act when the alarm was raised?
Somebody somewhere—a politico or otherwise—failed to make this information public and failed to remedy the situation that we are now examining in the House.
Could it be that there was an attempt to keep this report secret? Could it be that it was outrageously censored? Does this government have something, someone or some other country to protect? Perhaps it has plagiarized reports produced by another person or country. Perhaps the government wants to protect people in Afghanistan who did not do their job properly and thus avoid blame.