I am considering challenging it because I am reading the definition of genocide in Canada. Under Canadian law, it says that:
genocide means an act or omission committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, an identifiable group of persons, as such, that at the time and in the place of its commission, constitutes genocide according to customary international law or conventional international law or by virtue of its being criminal
I would say that by harmonizing this bill with other laws in Canada, we are not going outside the scope of the bill. We are actually attempting to harmonize it, because there is nothing in Canadian law that says the determination of genocide....
We can make a motion in the House about genocide, but for an act to have effectiveness in the world, it needs to follow Canadian law. Right now, under Canadian law, the Parliament does not determine genocide. We actually have a set of conventions that Canada has signed and agreed to, and there are international laws. We do not determine cases of genocide in the House of Commons: We opine on them and we make statements about them. That's what we do as parliamentarians. To actually have that determination of genocide have effect in our world, in Canada, as a country, successive governments and successive Parliaments have said that it needs to be “according to customary international law or conventional international law or by the virtue of its being criminal”.
Criminality in Canada, the last time I understood it, was still determined by a court of law, not by Parliament. Parliament writes laws, but we don't determine whether or not a law has been broken. That's why we have three branches of government. That's why we have an executive branch, a legislative branch and a parliamentary branch.
I think it's very important for us to say that this amendment to the law is actually in scope because it is following a harmonization of law. As such, I would challenge the chair's ruling on that.