I'm sorry, I'm not aware of the situation you're referring to, an arrest of MPs within Canada. If an MP breaches our law and is under suspicion for our law, then perhaps that person should be arrested. What we're talking about is genuinely elected representatives in these other democracies who are then denied their right to participate in democracy.
The point I made in my opening remarks is that Canada and New Zealand live in very benign democracies: they work; we have elections. Sometimes we don't like the result, but we all accept the result. We move on and we wait for the next election.
That does not happen in many democracies around the world. The extent to which abuse was occurring was an eye-opener to me. I think at the moment, the committee I'm referring to is investigating about 500 or 600 MPs who have been abused and whose human rights are being denied in a total of 42 countries. It's a widespread problem.