These are slow steps, but this is part of that process. Mr. Arnold, yes. I will continue to work in Mr. Godfrey's place for other constituents, like Ahmad Abou-Elmaati and Dean Peroff, another constituent of mine. I'm working with Mr. Peroff now, particularly on the rights of detained citizens.
There are two issues here. The sort of macro issue is about the responsibility of the Canadian government to protect our citizens. This is one subset of that. I am quite involved in several others. But this piece of legislation will also now inform me, because this is one part of our government's responsibility to ensure that citizenship is indivisible, that our government will protect us when we are out of the country, proactively by ensuring civil rights in the world but also reactively through methods of recourse such as this act.
I want to ask a little bit about other countries. I am very pleased that Ms. Stoyles said that we would sooner actually focus on the exemptions of the acts out of immunity, as opposed to the countries. So we can have a principled activity, as opposed to a political activity--where we name our favourites or those most likely to offend--because offenders can happen any day anywhere. The offences need to be focused on, not the offenders. I think that needs to be placed in legislation.
I'm thinking of perhaps Spain or the U.K. with Mr. Pinochet, or whether there are other countries that have taken their acts and put it in line with the convention and have done something that we can model. Is there any knowledge of that?