Mr. Rico, regarding your friend from Mexico, her husband died, was killed in Mexico, her daughter was kidnapped and raped, and then she came to Canada. The case for her entire family, including her daughter, was rejected. They were deported back to Mexico. Subsequently, in Mexico her daughter was kidnapped, killed, and her body dumped on the street. This is in Mexico. So Mexico, in your mind, is not necessarily always safe for some people.
Are you surprised if I give you two statistics? Number one, Canada last year accepted 21,860 refugees, the lowest number since 2000. So we have a drop in the cases of refugee claimants' acceptance in Canada. Number two is the refugee board: the independent audit found that the majority of the appointees—in fact, 61% of them—were appointed without merit or without fulfilling some kind of guiding principles and guidelines of fairness or transparency, etc. So under that kind of situation, is it surprising that this system at this point has failed your friend and her family, and how would the appeal division assist in your specific case where the family was deported?