Good morning, Mr. Matas. Thank you very much for coming.
I know we've been speaking a lot about financial consideration, but I want to give you a specific example. As you know, there are millions of Canadians who live in Canada but have extended families abroad, me included, especially in southeast Asia. If you have a limited number of family members here and you return back to your origin country and you have an extended family there—whether they be cousins, uncles or second cousins—you might find you have a relative who can donate an organ. Obviously, as you know, in certain countries the public health care system is not robust, so you have to go to the private system. If you decide to cover the expenses for that relative, would this bill criminalize that, as it's currently written? If it does, is there some way to protect a legitimate sort of procedure from one family member to another?