Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you for permitting me to substitute in the subcommittee on human rights.
Welcome to our guests.
I am the member of Parliament for Parkdale—High Park, which is home to the largest Tibetan community in Canada. One thing I'm well aware of is that the vast majority of those members of the Tibetan Canadian community have come here as refugees. I've heard many stories in addition to what our witnesses have said today about human rights violations. It is an issue of great concern to me as a member of Parliament and to our community, and I believe it is a matter that should be of concern to all in our country.
Mr. Sweet and I are members of the Parliamentary Friends of Tibet committee. Mr. Sweet is the chair. I'm the vice-chair. It is a committee that has been very active. Last year, under the leadership of Senator Di Nino, we hosted here in Canada an international parliamentary conference on Tibet, and parliamentarians came from around the world.
It's an issue that Canada has been very active on. We also voted unanimously, I believe in 2006—I could be wrong—to make His Holiness the Dalai Lama an honorary Canadian citizen, something of which we are very proud. That has been the kind of activity we've had here.
However, recently Canada signed the Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement with China, the FIPA, and we have been developing a closer trading relationship with China.
My question is twofold. First, do you think the Canadian government is doing enough to speak out against the human rights violations in Tibet? Second, what role can Canada play to help open negotiations between representatives from the Tibetan community and the Chinese government to help resolve the ongoing situation in Tibet?
Those are my two questions. Are we doing enough? What could we do to help the dialogue?