Thank you very much, Chair.
I want to thank everyone for coming in and for flagging a whole lot of things. As my colleague said, we really need to look at the balance between security, human rights and individual rights.
Thank you. This is a very interesting conversation.
I want to welcome Mr. Kolga, because we worked on Magnitsky together, a long time ago.
I want to go to the Canadian Bar Association. The Canadian Bar Association flagged that the referenced country really does become too broad a net. In other words, we are struggling with it here when we look at what's happening with China, disinformation and the foreign interference question. We don't want to say that the Chinese are not admissible to Canada. How do we balance and define that? I know that you have to name people on the sanctions list, but how do ordinary citizens inadvertently not fall into that particular trap because they come from a bigger country, say, like Belarus, China or Russia? They may have similar names or may have a relationship to somebody who has nothing at all to do with government distinction and government deliberations. How do you do that?
I've heard a lot of people suggest things. Is there somebody with a nice, clean recommendation?
Mr. Bellissimo, it looks like you're ready to put your hand up.
Go ahead.