Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
When we discussed clause 3, our Conservative colleagues voiced their concern that Bill C-393 would divert Canada's Access to Medicines Regime from its primary objective. They were concerned that the resulting bill, act or regime would serve commercial interests more than humanitarian ones. I am certain that is not the intention; nor is it the intention of all those witnesses who testified throughout the proceedings that we needed to provide appropriate aid to children with AIDS, to their families—those mothers, fathers and grandmothers who are worried about the future of their children and grandchildren. So that is not what the people who introduced Bill C-393 wanted; nevertheless, the concerns are there, and they are legitimate.
Throughout the debate on Bill C-393, I often encouraged the committee members to come up with other solutions. There are actually other solutions; there is a way to help facilitate the current regime, in order to build more examples, more experience, for analysis purposes.
If the committee does not adopt Bill C-393, there will be nothing to take its place—no report, no other solutions. There is only one solution before us, and that is Bill C-393, which seeks to amend the current regime.
I wonder how we can view this amended regime and ensure that it does not exceed the limits we want to see imposed. We do not want the regime to stop serving humanitarian interests, and humanitarian interests only. I was discussing it with my colleague, Robert Bouchard, and our only solution may be to adopt Bill C-393 and turn it into a pilot project.
I would encourage my colleague from the New Democratic Party to sit down, after the committee stage, and see what amendments could be made, at the report stage, to turn this into a pilot project. A sunset clause comes to mind first and foremost, in order to put a time limit on the bill.
The way I see it, we should have come up with a proposal when we originally began studying this bill. Unfortunately, this is the only proposal we have. The government members have not shown a willingness to find a way to improve the current regime and make it more usable. A system that has been used just one time has not really been used at all. We cannot even say whether it works or not. Well, I suppose it does work, since it has a 100% success rate based on the one time it was used.
As I already mentioned, Mr. Chair, we are going to support clause 4, we are going to support all the other clauses, and we are also going to support our colleague from the New Democratic Party, who wants to remove certain clauses to bring the regime in line with the Food and Drugs Act and to strengthen Parliament's role. Clearly, we will propose some amendments at the report stage to ensure that the regime serves solely humanitarian interests, as originally intended.