Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank you for coming before the committee.
You're absolutely right: this is a very complex issue. I'm not a lawyer, and I guess from a layperson's perspective, I find it really troubling that what we have is what I'm going to say is alleged residual discrimination, which everybody seems to be well aware of. We have any number of documented cases of alleged residual discrimination, whether it's the Canadian Bar Association talking about potential family status discrimination, which you highlighted in your presentation, or the Wabanaki and sibling discrimination. We have the problems with unstated paternity, which compound the difficulty.
From a human rights perspective, I'd like to put a question to you. We have, as I think the minister indicated, 14 cases currently winding their way through the court system around varying complaints on status. You now have a number of cases before you that you've referred to the tribunal around status. Has there been anything around citizenship as well?