Ms. Mohamud, your case is extremely disturbing, but you will understand that I'm going to use what little time I am allotted to talk about Nathalie Morin and her three children.
Johanne, I know you well. Together we've been trying for more than a year—and you've been trying for longer than that—to convince the Canadian government to do what it takes to bring Nathalie and her three children back here. I want to emphasize that the situation in which Nathalie finds herself is exceptional. A man probably could not wind up this kind of situation. Nathalie is a woman who's being subjugated. She is not subjugated as a woman, but because she is being confined, malnourished, poorly cared for and often poorly housed. She was forced to have her last two children because she was not allowed to have any contraception. She is only rarely able to communicate with the outside. She can do it when she temporarily steals her husband's telephone. She is living in extremely cruel isolation alone with her three children, who are not receiving the education to which they are entitled so that they can have a future.
So Johanne, I am outlining what has been lacking to date. Canada says it wants to offer Nathalie diplomatic protection. It should take up her case, and not by saying she is overstating it and so on, and it should negotiate with Saudi Arabia for her return with her three children. Is that in fact what you want? Could you give us more details, please?