What I would like to draw your attention to is that if that is going to happen, then according to all the conventions we have signed, it would happen in the context of the youth justice system that Canada has in place. There has to be that legal assessment.
I would also ask you to consider that other child soldiers are accused of equally horrendous things--some of them, in northern Uganda, of killing members of their own families. Yet we ask those countries to bring those young people home and reintegrate them, often without trials. I've seen it, and I've worked with them.
We're not being asked to do something we don't ask other countries to do. There are various ways of having legal accountability, and in some of those countries it has to do with traditional approaches to justice. That is not to say that young people are not held accountable, but they're held accountable in ways that are restorative and that reintegrate them into their societies. That's what we are holding up as a norm when they are children. That is the norm that's held up in all the agreements Canada has signed.