I have a quick question for Mr. Nash. I'm trying to get my head around this. What we're looking at are some very heinous and awful crimes that have been committed, but to my knowledge, from what I've read, most of them are committed by locals. These are not Canadian citizens. They are employed by Canadian companies, but they are locals.
So how are we supposed to police them when they are locals in their country committing a crime? They happen to be on the payroll of a Canadian company, but they're not Canadians committing crimes abroad, which is very different from the examples that this lady, the legal expert here, mentioned.
We have extraterritorial laws, but those extraterritorial laws are for Canadian citizens committing crimes abroad, not for locals committing crimes in their own countries. I'm trying to understand how we are supposed to police locals committing crimes in their own countries.