I haven't seen a grossed-up estimate of that, but the costs are enormous. We can't underestimate this.
There is first of all the monitoring cost for the coast guard and the navy as such a vessel approaches. You saw all the CBSA personnel helping to unload the passengers from that last vessel. We're talking about dozens of personnel involved in that. There is of course the cost associated with detention, income support, interim health coverage, and legal aid. There are the investigatory costs, and then there are the costs to our law enforcement and intelligence agencies, as we've had to beef up their presence in the transit countries to try to interrupt these activities.
So I don't think I'd be out of order in talking about these costs as quite easily adding up to likely tens of millions of dollars over the course of, say, the first year of the arrival of such a vessel.
I think that's one of the many reasons Canadians are upset about this. They think it's a violation.
We take for granted the degree to which, in this country, there is a pretty broad public consensus in favour of quite remarkably high levels of immigration. But we cannot take that for granted.
One of the reasons Canadians, particularly new Canadians, are frustrated with this form of illegal migration is because they see it as violating the fundamental principle of fairness. You don't often see Canadians cutting in front of a queue. Canadians have a sense that the immigration system should....
And by the way, I have friends from the opposition here who say there is no such thing as a refugee queue. Not true: there are 12 million UN convention refugees patiently waiting for resettlement opportunities around the world. When the Vietnamese fled Indochina, they went to UNHCR processing centres. They had their claims assessed and they waited patiently, often for several months, for resettlement opportunities.
There are people around the world.... There are regional resettlement opportunities or protection opportunities in Southeast Asia for people who need that.
But these people are ignoring all of that and jumping past, I don't know, two or three dozen countries to come to Canada. This is not the only country. Why would people choose the country that is essentially furthest from them as the only option for protection? I would argue it's because there is a mixed motive here for most, if not a primary motive, which is economic opportunity, family ties, and the ability to use our very generous family reunification process.