We met with perhaps fewer than 50. We met with several. There are other groups we met with in terms of the Montana accord—not me personally—and we also met recently with the Coalition haïtienne au Canada contre la dictature en Haïti. We have met with them before, and what came through very clearly is the sentiment that everyone.... There is no dispute in terms of the crisis, in terms of the situation, the dire situation. I think from hearing all the different people, the witnesses, we are living a dire emergency. We are surviving day by day, barely surviving, if this is what it is called.
Yes, we do have different emergencies going on. The problem is, how do we resolve them?
We can no longer sit in Haiti and say, “Come and help us resolve it. You do it. You bring the boots on the ground.” It can no longer work. It has not worked in the past. I think this is what I'm hearing from the compatriots in Canada that we have been speaking to.
It has not worked in the past. It has brought cholera, it has brought sexual abuse, and it has not reinforced Haitian civil society, Haitian institutions, the Haitian state. We need a different model, and what we are saying is that the model must be a transition by which we can ourselves—our sovereign selves, with our dignity—talk to Canada as two states talking to each other. We need co-operation.
We know we need the help. We know we need assistance. We have asked for assistance, but we do not want the boots coming as a result of Mr. Henry saying “Come and intervene”, because some of what he could have done, he has not done. He has crossed his arms.
This is what we're saying. This is what we are hearing also from Haitian-origin Canadians, if I can say it that way.
Thank you. I hope I have responded.