Yes, and I certainly wouldn't say that the screening should not be happening and that there should not be some effort to take a look at whether there are these allegations against war criminals. Because then, of course, we'd have more people who are the victims living in Canada in the same communities as the perpetrators. That's not a situation we want to see.
I think, as you say, though—understanding that I'm not sure you're going to prevent all cases with whatever system you have in place—it is really about looking at the removal system and knowing that there will be some situations where it's appropriate to use it.
I guess that in terms of the trust, one of the things that crossed my mind is that for us, as victims rights advocates—to sort of turn it the other way—if we see our government officials really taking a holistic approach to this, really making a commitment to justice and negotiating that, and supporting the kinds of things that I've seen, then we also would feel more inclined to say, yes, absolutely, there are situations where deportation is appropriate and needs to be done, situations where that's the only option. We'd absolutely support that.
We get into a situation of wanting to really oppose it because we're not seeing a holistic approach being taken.