That's is a very good question, MP Ehsassi.
With the caveat that I've only seen very preliminary news reports and haven't had time to digest it very much yet, my instinct is that this is actually bad news for human rights in Iran for a variety of reasons, but primarily because it gives a further lifeline to the Islamic regime in Tehran. It removes a particular sort of threat. This regional rivalry with Saudi Arabia was a particular threat to the Islamic regime, so the Iranian regime will likely be empowered as a result of it.
Furthermore, Iran will be further empowered by the fact that China now seems to be fully in the camp of supporting Iran's regime. I think that anything that normalizes and stabilizes that regime further and gets it out of the moment of crisis that it's been in for the past few months is bad news for Iran's people and the human rights movement generally.
My recommendation to the subcommittee and to the government would be for us to not take our eye off the ball. Iran's regime remains an apartheid regime and we ought to continue to treat it as such, even if it creates alliances with those in its neighbourhood. We ought to remain committed to helping Iranian people and Iranian women in particular.
I urge you. Even if Iran gains allies in the region, Canada should remain steadfast in its support of Iranian people.