I think that's a different stage in the process. At that point, we're talking about the acquisition or the grant of citizenship or the bars to the grant of citizenship. In my view, the problem with that is that there already is a mechanism in the act for dealing with that. A permanent resident who has committed a serious crime or who has been convicted of a serious crime overseas can lose their permanent resident status and is then not eligible to become a citizen.
The problem with building it into the Citizenship Act as an on-off switch is that there's no room for context. There's no room for looking at whether or not this is in fact a serious crime and whether or not the person should be barred from citizenship. It simply says that if you've been convicted of these types of offences overseas, you are not eligible for citizenship. In my view, the appropriate process should be that if it's serious enough, take away the person's permanent resident status. If it's not serious enough for them to lose their permanent resident status, then let them get on with integrating into Canadian society and becoming a citizen.
In my view, there's already enough mechanisms in IRPA to deal with that, and adding it into the Citizenship Act would create problems rather than solving anything.