Yes. This committee, above all other committees, recognizes the atrocities in Iran. We have North Korea and we have other countries where you'd almost ask “What's the use?” at times. You just feel, “What can we do as long as that guy is the leader in North Korea?”—very similar types of feelings to what we have with Iran.
So there's an appeal to do something. I think that's what Mr. Cotler is asking us: let's do something.
What can we do?
A call to genocide is absolutely, without doubt, the most horrific call that any leader can propagate. A leader of a country who is calling for the annihilation of another country, a democratic country, certainly has to be met with the greatest response we can make. But what Mr. Cotler is asking for in this thing is something that is unprecedented here in Canada. From what I have been told, it's an unprecedented movement, asking the International Criminal Court to intervene in this way.
What are the foreign policy consequences to this type of motion? I mean, is it just a win-win situation for Canada, that all of a sudden we're going to call on this extraordinary response, although foreign policy considerations have not been adequately studied?
Do we have a chance of winning? It's nice to lodge a complaint. It's a little protest—well, it's a major protest. It shows that we do not accept and are responding in the most powerful way we know how. But do we have a chance of winning? Again, we don't know whether we have a chance of winning this.
Canada has consistently taken Iran to task on its human rights violations, its misbehaviour in international affairs, and we have done a number of things. We have signed on to a policy of controlled engagement. What does that mean? It means there are only certain things that we at this point are going to talk to Iran about. We still have the door open to speak about nuclear disarmament, and we're doing that. We've consistently spoken out against their threat of nuclear weaponry and going down that path. Their violation of human rights? We've heard and we agree, listening to the people who have come here horrified about what they see happening in Iran.
We still have the ability to speak to Iran about human rights. We have the ability, through this controlled engagement, to discuss with them the torture and murder of Canadians by Iranian officials, and we've seen that with Zahra Kazemi in an Iranian prison.
Some of the other things Canada can't do include that we can't sell anything to Iran that's going to have a military involvement, that is going to be used for aggression or for even defending their own interests. We do not permit opening Iranian consulates here in Canada, a very tough, strict stand saying, “No, you can't have a consulate here, because we totally disagree with your record and what you're doing in Iran.” We say, you can't fly into Canadian airspace; you're not to enter Canadian airspace. All these things, certainly, are a response. We're well-known. The Government of Canada for a long time has stood up to Iran, and we're recognized as standing up to Iran.
Mr. Cotler's motion is for Mr. Ahmadinejad to be prosecuted in the International Criminal Court. The problem is, Israel hasn't signed on, Iran hasn't signed on, India hasn't signed on, the United States hasn't signed on to this agreement, and we're now going to try them in a court under a jurisdiction they have never signed on to. That is problematic. It's their right not to sign the treaty. Are we then going to bind them by the treaty they didn't sign?
Another concern I have is that when we go this route, we're opening the doors right now for every other country, even those that have not signed on to this treaty, to find themselves hauled before this court that they don't recognize and be tried for the human right violations or the crimes that they may be chosen to be charged with.
I agree with the spirit of the motion. We have to do something; we have to do more. But is this the route to go? Is this the route we want to take? At this juncture, I don't think I can vote for this motion, although I'm sitting on this committee, because we recognize that there are major human.... But this isn't the right response.