I would address your question in the following way with regard to avoiding situations of statelessness, which is a very important consideration for us, given our obligations under the 1961 convention to which Canada is a party, under which we have an obligation to ensure that we're not rendering Canadian citizens stateless.
How we propose to address the issue under the bill would be in the following two ways.
First, there's the amendment before the committee on ensuring that the bill is limited to circumstances where someone has at least one other citizenship to fall back on.
Second, as a matter of procedural safeguard to ensure that problem doesn't present itself, another amendment for consideration before the committee is the one where the minister is required to provide the person notice, and as part of that notice the person would be invited to make submissions in their own case. The person would be enabled to know the case against them, including the department's evidence that the person is a dual citizen and the other part of the evidence with regard to the actions they've committed.
At that time, the person would be in a position to make submissions to the decision-maker, to identify whether they may be at risk or whether the evidence may not be correct that the person is a dual citizen in fact, so that would be a safeguard.
If, for example, the government has evidence suggesting that the person is a dual citizen but for some reason that evidence may not be up to date or correct, the person would have the opportunity to put forward their own evidence on that count. If it turns out that the person doesn't have access to another citizenship, the case wouldn't be able to proceed.