Sure. In addition to the concern about conflating immigration law with citizenship law, we're also concerned about the fact that while in Canada we are governed by the rule of law. We have a constitution and we have a charter. That's not always the case with many other countries.
At our clinic we have mostly clients from China and Vietnam. I think a strong argument can be made that the rule of law is not always present in those systems, so it's very problematic that we start to kind of equate foreign convictions with convictions in Canada, for instance, and also that we use the citizenship process to basically doubly penalize someone who may or may not have been wrongfully convicted overseas.
For those reasons, we are very concerned about this.