I don't mind leading off until he comes in.
We got onto trying to compare what we're doing in Afghanistan with what is happening in Colombia. We really didn't have an opportunity to touch on that.
This is irrespective of what we're hearing or what we're reading in the news about torture. That's a separate issue altogether. It's the fact that we made a decision as a country, as a government, to go to this trouble spot, which we knew was a trouble spot, to address human rights violations, labour abuses, etc. We made that decision.
Is it wrong to make the same decision now to go to a trouble spot--if we want to use that expression--where indeed we have a government that has shown a sincere interest in trying to correct it? Meanwhile, the current president in Afghanistan said today in his inauguration that, you know, we're going to straighten it out. Well, he had five years, and we didn't see progress.
We had President Uribe, as I think was mentioned earlier by Mr. Keddy, before our committee before the recess. The man unequivocally stated that they'd had problems, but they'd made these efforts, those efforts, and so on.
We were introduced to a gentleman by the name of Frank Pearl, who was taken on by the Colombian government. His mandate is to work to help reintegrate people who have gone astray, people with the paramilitary, to get them retrained, re-entered back into their homes, their communities, etc., to become productive citizens.
Personally, I've read, I've seen, I've heard--I can't say I've seen, but I've read--and, being a typical Canadian, I like to give the benefit of the doubt. Are we wrong in doing what we're doing in Afghanistan? If we are, why are we doing it in Afghanistan and why are we not doing it in Colombia? At least in Colombia right now, we have an opportunity to market our goods and services. In Afghanistan maybe there's a future market, I don't know. But right now we have a market in Colombia.
Are we wrong in doing that, David?