In my view, it would fit. This is a belief. It's a spiritual belief. In my view, it would be captured by the existing legislation, and it wouldn't be necessary to amend the legislation.
Actually, now that I think about it, Joel Chipkar himself was involved in this issue, because he was engaged in a libel suit against a member of the Chinese consulate in Toronto; he won that libel suit by default, and the fellow has since left. The libel laws are one way of getting at it, but of course with the libel laws you get damages.
These people simply should not be in Canada. When you're dealing with the diplomatic corps, Canada can just say we don't want you. It's as simple as that. They don't even have to give a reason. They don't have to say it's a violation of the law. They don't even have to establish in criminal court that a crime has been committed.
We're not suggesting here that these diplomats and consular officials should be prosecuted, although that's obviously an option. We're suggesting, simply, that they be expelled. Once they're doing this stuff, whether or not there is a legal opinion that fits four-square within the laws of hate incitement, it's so offensive that it is certainly grounds for expulsion.