Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
As I indicated before we had our short recess, what got this all going was a report from an article in The Globe and Mail—at least, I believe it was—by Mr. Paul Koring that the amendment addresses. In it, he makes a number of very serious allegations. I want to proceed with this as soon as possible.
I assume members of the committee have seen this article, so I'm not going to read it. I've quoted one or two paragraphs of it. I'm not going to do anything further, other than to say that because of that fact—unless someone's going to disagree with me—that's where many of these allegations came forward. His name isn't on this report. The names that are on the report are people who are most relevant. I submit that I agree with the amendment because this individual should be heard before the other individuals, and after the Information Commissioner.
Mr. Chair, like the original motion, the report requests “that the Clerk of the Committee request from the Department of Foreign Affairs, a copy of the censored version of the report.” You've indicated to me that you have done that, and that you hoped it would be here today.
Mr. Chair, I'd like to go further than this amendment, and I'd like to make a subamendment to the amendment. What I'm suggesting goes after the word “report” in the final line of the fourth report, where it says, “that the Clerk of the Committee request from the Department of Foreign Affairs, a copy of the censored version of the report”. I'd like to propose a subamendment that has the following wording: “and that the Committee as it...”.
I'm adding on, sir. Are you following what I'm trying to do?