Thank you.
With respect to the information we have shared under SCISA, what I can do is perhaps give you some illustrative examples of the kinds of information that we might disclose. For example, if there's a national security investigation under way by one of our national security organizations, say the RCMP, we might disclose to them personal information to confirm the identity of someone who's suspected of planning or performing an act that would undermine the security of Canada. That would assist them in making a positive identification of the person and be able to take appropriate law enforcement action. That might be one example in terms of our disclosing to another organization.
In terms of a proactive disclosure that we might do under SCISA, an example might be an individual who is suspected of travelling abroad to engage in a terrorism-related activity and who has just acquired a Canadian passport to return to Canada. There again, proactively providing that information to our national security agencies could help them in terms of making sure that appropriate enforcement action is taken when that person returns to Canada.
Another example might be information disclosed to us by a security organization. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we're responsible for determining admissibility of people into Canada, so if an organization has information that a person is a threat to Canada's national security, that is very helpful to us in terms of determining that they're inadmissible to Canada and we should not issue a visa to them to facilitate their entry into Canada.
Those are some illustrative examples of where SCISA can be used in our context.