Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to follow up on the question that Ms. McPherson raised. I think it's really important. I wasn't sure I was liking where we're going on this. I want to raise the issue very specifically of Médecins Sans Frontières and the closing of its operations yesterday but also, generally speaking, of those who are helped by Canada to provide support in that.
We got down a hole there about training. I don't want to go down that hole about training because these are people who we in Canada call peace officers. These are police forces. These are people who are there to protect the people that Canada has spent a lot of time and money training, supporting and engaging.
They're threatening to kill Médecins Sans Frontières staff. They pull ambulances over and threaten to kill the patients. They threaten to kill patients in hospitals.
Médecins Sans Frontières acts every day in countries all around the world, facing extreme danger. That's what they do, and we support them in doing that. I personally support them in doing that, but not for them to get attacked by police officers in uniform, SWAT officers in uniform, and ununiformed police officers.
I'm not buying the training discussion. Help us unravel this. What could Canada do? What should we do? What can we do with our partners? This is extraordinary; this is not normal.