Thank you, Mr. Chair.
In Canada these days, we're seeing some of our own military personnel coming back from Afghanistan, some of them with combat stress. When I consider that this boy of 15 was in a firefight with American special forces and was wounded and nearly executed, I can't imagine what it must have been like for this boy—and I repeat, boy, quite emphatically—to be taken to Guantánamo to enhanced interrogation, and that's a euphemism today for pretty heavy-duty torture, from most people's points of view. I believe the Canadian government has to recognize Omar Khadr as a child combatant and it has to do everything it can to have him repatriated to Canada.
But the process of repatriation, how would you define that? Is it something that's fairly easy; is it something very complex? And how important is it for Canada to show leadership in this case?