Thank you, Chair.
Following up on Mr. Menegakis's questions leads me to one of my own. You referred to some witnesses who have appeared and made comments. Ms. Sheryl Saperia was a witness at our last official meeting, and she said the following:
With regard to discrimination in the case of people who have dual citizenship versus people who don't, first of all, not all distinctions constitute discrimination.
She said when there's a distinction that's grounded in law, meaning that Canada has obligations under the Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness, we are bound by those rules.
And then she says:
I should note that in that convention it says that there is no problem with a country having the right to remove a person's nationality if the person does things that are disloyal to the state and can cause harm to the state. This is fully within the bounds of that convention.
Could you comment on that?