Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I support the bill that you have introduced in the Senate and the House, but my comment today, and I'd like your comment on my comment, is that we can pass all the laws we want, and the government can publish all the regulations it wants, but if there's no enforcement of these laws and regulations, then they're nothing more than ink on paper.
As you know, Canada signed the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement several years ago, and article 23.6 of that agreement requires Canada to ban imports produced with forced or slave labour. I want to quote what that agreement says:
Accordingly, each Party shall prohibit the importation of goods into its territory from other sources produced in whole or in part by forced or compulsory labor, including forced or compulsory child labor.
Parliament subsequently adopted amendments to the Customs Tariff Act that changed that act to come into conformity with article 23.6 of CUSMA and subsequently the government published regulations to the customs tariffs and those came into effect in July 2020, more than two years ago.
As you know as well, Canada is obligated under the Genocide Convention to prevent genocide, and article I of the convention says:
The Contracting Parties confirm that genocide, whether committed in time of peace or in time of war, is a crime under international law which they undertake to prevent and to punish.
Parliament early last year adopted a resolution recognizing that a genocide against the Uighur people is taking place, so despite the fact that over two years ago Parliament amended the Customs Tariff Act, which led to the promulgation of regulations to ban importation of forced and slave labour products, despite the fact that Parliament recognized a genocide was taking place against the Uighur people who were being forced to produce cotton and tomatoes, imports of those products continue to pour into Canada.
CBSA last year, as you know, blocked only one shipment, temporarily, out of the hundreds of millions, billions, of dollars of products that are pouring into this country, which I have no doubt are being produced using slave or forced labour.
In fact, south of the border, the Americans, as you pointed out in your testimony, have interdicted 1,400 container shipments of goods that were produced using forced or slave labour. The U.S. government doesn't believe that's good enough and is actually stepping up enforcement. They have plans to hire over 300 new positions at their border to continue to interdict even more products from coming into their country. They're implementing new computer systems, new training, and they're conducting outreach to importers to prevent this from happening.
I go to my original point. We can pass all the laws we want. The government can promulgate all the regulations they want, but they're just ink on paper unless there's enforcement.
If your bill passes the House of Commons and becomes law, what does this government need to do to ensure that this law and other laws and regulations that are currently on the books are actually enforced?