First of all, I would thank you all for listening. Such a hearing is maybe the first step in doing something.
I cannot refer to the death camps or anything. As I told you, when you're staying inside North Korea you know nothing. You know only what's on the surface. You have no clue about what Mrs. Kim endured. She is the expert on that. I only learned about that afterwards when I met the refugees. But maybe Mrs. Kim can again make some statement about the death camps.
I would like you to have more hearings. We fully respect this motion and whatever is on the way now. I'm happy that Canada is doing something.
I heard yesterday about a new Holocaust museum here in Winnipeg. I was once at the Holocaust museum in Washington, and there was a special exhibition about what's going on in Sudan. Maybe one day there will be an exhibition on what's going on in the Middle East, in Egypt nowadays. Then I had an idea yesterday. Hey, so many students are going through your Parliament on tours. Why not have a special exhibition about North Korea in this new Holocaust museum?
The North Koreans need information, so we went to the North Korean border from South Korea, near Panmunjom. We inflated simple balloons that carried little radios--cheap Chinese productions. The wind was blowing to the north. The people were happy. As I told you, my translator asked if I could give him a radio from China. They are listening to this information. They are needy for information about the outside world.
My dream has always been that what I told the North Koreans when they kicked me out would become true. I told them, “One day we will meet again at the International Criminal Court in The Hague”. Maybe that's also a way. We need somebody who will maybe do the same as was done with Milosevic in The Hague. We need somebody who will make Kim Jong-il accountable. He's still there. He is a head of state, and he is committing genocide against his own people. Therefore, I beg you to do something stronger.