I'll go back to my years as a worker in a settlement agency for immigrants and refugees. The big difference between settling refugees who had already been chosen by the Canadian government abroad, and very specifically, the Afghan refugees—or the Kosovo refugees when we had the Kosovo crisis in 1990—is that when those persons arrived in Canada, or very specifically in Quebec, these government agreements were already in place. The programs were there, the whole system was there to sustain and support this resettlement. When we're dealing with refugee claimants, we don't have that, but we do have the statutory obligation to hear these people and to help them.
I think one of the big fears Canadians have is with regard to the economic refugees, the ones who seem to be coming to our borders as a way to find a better life for themselves and their families, but also to avoid the regular immigration system by applying and waiting the five, seven, or ten years, or whatever time it takes to go through the whole immigration system.
How do you propose that a country like Canada, which has very generous and welcoming settlement policies, would address that fear?