I'm sorry to continuously interrupt you. Apparently, I'm very excited about this today.
There's one thing that I wanted to flag with regard to Ukraine. Of course, it is the most pressing issue that we are facing, or one of the most pressing issues that we are facing. It's very important. It is why, in the very first meeting on December 13, I also brought forward a motion. I want to make sure that we have the opportunity to read it into the record. It reads:
That, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), the Committee hold at least two meetings on the situation in Ukraine and invite witnesses, including officials from Global Affairs Canada and the Ukrainian Canadian Congress.
The reason I wanted to read that in—my thinking is with regard to what is happening in Ukraine and the aggression we are seeing from Russia—is that it is an extremely fluid situation. It is changing extremely rapidly. My worry is that if we undertake a one-time study right now, at the beginning of our sitting days within this committee, we will not have the opportunity to be continually updated on this important issue.
We know there will be a take-note debate in the House of Commons today, so there will be an opportunity for all parliamentarians to debate this. We know that right now the defence committee is looking at this issue, and that's very important. I would say that many committees within our parliamentary structure have an obligation to look at what is happening in Ukraine with the aggression from Russia. This is an extremely important issue for many reasons.
What I would rather see this committee do is have updates from officials and people who can give us more information as the issues evolve. I'd like to propose—I don't know if this needs to be a new amendment to the amendment to the subcommittee report—that we, even as early as Wednesday, bring in officials from Global Affairs Canada. We could conceivably bring in people from the Ukrainian Canadian Congress to give us a briefing of where we are right now. We could then plan to have follow-up meetings as we go forward. We would be able to do other studies in between those.
We have an awful lot of work to do. Vaccine equity is one that I'm pushing very hard for. This is something that affects people in every country in the world and it is urgent, but we also have what's happening in Taiwan, which I think is very closely related to what we're seeing in Ukraine. There are a lot of other pieces of work that need to happen in this committee.
Perhaps a solution to that would be to make sure that we, as the foreign affairs committee, are looking at the situation in Ukraine, but, realizing that because it is so fluid and evolving so quickly, we need to be a little more flexible on how we undertake that study.