From the very beginning, Mr. Al Shahrani has wanted to come to Canada. For him, the excuse was that he wanted to be able to visit his children. So, when I asked him point-blank if I could go and see Nathalie, he proudly answered, saying that, in Saudi Arabia, family rights are recognized, that there was no problem at all, that his country would welcome me, that I would be given a visa and that I could go and see Nathalie and the children. It is quite clear that that message was intended to make him look good. Of course, I only stayed for a week. That was enough, because I was living under the same roof as him.
I went over there with my son. Only once were we able to get him out of the house with my son so that I could be alone with Nathalie. We were able to film in the living room. When we would hear a noise in the corridor, I would stop the camera and then start it up again. During the night, Nathalie wrote the affidavit that you now have. We would stay up all night, Nathalie and I—during the daytime, Saeed was always there—so that I could give her information and question her. A week is very short.
The person who signed the affidavit, as a witness to each of the pages, was Ms. Huda Alsunnari, the representative of the Saudi Arabian Human Rights Commission. So, she is well aware of the fact that Nathalie wrote this for Canada, even though she was unable to read it, because she does not understand French. She acted as a witness.
Ms. Alsunnari was also the person who came to see me at the airport and gave me copies—folded in her hand, so that Saeed would not see them—of all the complaints filed by Nathalie in Saudi Arabia. She gave them to me secretly, asking me not to let anyone know that she was the one who had given them to me.