Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm concerned. I have a large Tamil population in my riding, and I hosted a town hall meeting recently in my riding to get some of their feelings as to what's happening back home. One of the things that happened at the town hall meeting, unfortunately...and to truly understand the conflict.... But I'm certainly not going to get into that. But there were obviously Tamils, and there were some Sinhalese who showed up, and it became a very difficult and hostile environment. One of the dilemmas with a motion like this is that it makes no differentiation as to what's happening there.
Now that a moratorium is being proposed, how do we deal with people who may be seeking refugee status in this country who are clearly people we do not want to have in this country? We now no longer can deport them. What if there are individuals--and I'm not making any suggestion that there might be--who we then come to discover have committed horrible atrocities back in Sri Lanka in this conflict? They're going to stay here and live within the same community as the people we're trying to protect. It's one of the things that just completely astound me.
I understand the intention of this motion, because many of us who have large Tamil populations in our ridings, in particular, have been listening to the stories of what is happening back home, and they are terrible stories. We've seen videos. We've had letters as to the situation. For me to now go back into my community and meet with the Tamil people, who have been so hurt and are so confused and upset by what's happening in their homeland, and tell them that....
I know Mr. Karygiannis doesn't really truly care about the Tamil people, as he would suggest, because if he did, Mr. Chair--