All right. Maybe we'll ask our analyst to take a peek at that.
With regard to the 50 months, I can certainly understand the frustration. That seems like a terrifying barrier to someone who is in a position of uncertain safety and is in danger.
One thought that occurs to me in this regard is that if we improve our capacity and lower the time, I assume we would actually become more of a destination for people who are in danger in those particular countries. The very fact that it's such a substantial barrier causes some to turn away and not attempt to come to Canada.
So I wonder if we face a bit of a catch-22 here, such that if we improve our capacity we'll get more people applying in the relevant places. That's not necessarily a bad thing in and of itself, because it may mean that deserving people are able to come to Canada, but I wonder if in the end that is the right metric to be measuring by, if you follow.
It's virtually increasing bandwidth, right? You increase bandwidth on the Internet and people start downloading bigger movies with higher pixilation rates. I wonder if there is some other way of measuring efficiency.
I could reverse that, though, and just ask whether, for other areas, like Nairobi, there are genuine refugee-receiving countries that are producing a faster turnaround time successfully in an environment where there is obviously a large number of potential refugees seeking asylum.