I agree with Mr. Dyck. We can't help everyone. So at some point, we have to set parameters. We have to prioritize. In fact, we're already prioritizing. If you look at Mr. Casasola's testimony yesterday, he talked about how the UNHCR selects which priorities they're going to designate in terms of resettlement. They're already putting priorities in place. It's just that not everybody will necessarily agree on what those priorities are. So it's not an issue of prioritization; it's an issue of how we prioritize.
The UNHCR is a very large bureaucracy. If you try to make a policy change, it's like trying to turn around the Titanic. It simply cannot be as fast as everybody would want it to be. As I said, it's a wonderful organization, and I'm not criticizing it. It's just that it's a very large organization.
Look at the fact that it wasn't until 2007 that the UNHCR actually publicly recognized that Iraqis needed to be resettled. There had been people targeted for eradication in Iraq since 2003. It took four years for the UNHCR to announce publicly that it was in favour of resettling them.
Those are just two examples of my point.
I respect my friend, Janet Dench, so much, but I don't think this is about politicizing, and it's not about lobbying. We're talking about groups that are subject to genocide. It's not who has the loudest voice; it's who is being targeted for these kinds of horrific crimes.