Mr. Chair, those are very good questions. It's a strong series of questions.
I'm familiar with Mr. Nabil's situation. There are members of the Religious Liberty Partnership who are engaging on his behalf. The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada is not directly engaging, and I'm not clear as to whether members of the EFC religious liberty commission are directly engaging or whether it's through the partnership network. But there is engagement on the issue.
I'm being asked to speculate whether Mr. Nabil's being a Coptic Christian contributed to his arrest and imprisonment. Certainly we would like to see him free. Certainly on a freedom of expression basis we would see that he doesn't belong in prison. However, it's difficult to assess the difference between somebody being falsely convicted because they've criticized the military in a military regime and being falsely convicted because they've criticized the military and they're also a Coptic Christian.
I can't put my headspace inside the headspace of the military tribunal to assess whether or not they've made that type of an assessment.