I don't know what's going on specifically in Kingston, but I see what I see in the paper or hear on television. Certainly we're concerned about the three persons, just on a human level, with what they're going through right now. As a former nurse in one of my professional lives, I would certainly be concerned about someone who has been on a hunger strike for that long.
Amnesty has been before this committee, I believe, and certainly before the committee on security with concerns about the security certificates as such and the fact that we are detaining people on very little concrete evidence, and we don't detain them for just a few months. One of those men, if I understand, has been there five or six years.
If we've got the evidence, then let's charge them with something, but don't leave them in this state of limbo for this long. Also, if we return them to their countries of origin, probably they are at great risk of being tortured, being arbitrarily detained, and possibly worse, and that is certainly something that Amnesty is 100% against and is very concerned about.