Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm happy to see both of you yet again. You come forward often here.
I'd particularly like to praise the Canadian Association of Manufacturers & Exporters for their buy Canadian policy. That, of course, is shared by the NDP, the only national party that has understood, as you have, the importance of government procurement being directed to Canadian companies and Canadian manufacturing.
As you know, this is a very controversial agreement. The business case simply is not there. Mr. Guimond mentioned the $6 million in pork sales. We had the beef cattle industry come forward and talk about $6 million in potential beef sales. We have the grain growers actually saying they prefer a multilateral agreement. So we're talking about very small levels of sales compared to the overall export industry. The reality is that, as this committee decided earlier this week, what is really needed is a level playing field in funding for export promotion.
So the issue comes back to one of values.
There have been scads of reports, and Mr. Stewart-Patterson, I respectfully have to say, every single independent and impartial human rights organization disagrees with you—most recently, the report on resource extraction, Land and Conflict. Have you read this report or have you received it?
I'll just mention a brief excerpt: Striking correlations have been observed between where investment—both domestic and foreign—takes place and rights abuses, ranging from murder and massacres and related massive land and property theft to violations of the rights to freedom of movement and to a healthy environment. Human rights violations are linked to efforts by those behind Colombia’s murderous paramilitaries to create conditions for investment from which they are positioned to benefit.
This is a report that came out just a few weeks ago.
I'm sure I know the answer already, but I need to ask, am I correct that the Canadian Council of Chief Executives would not be in favour of a free trade agreement with North Korea?