Thank you.
We heard from DFAIT just the other day, before the Colombian government gave its presentation. They said exactly the same thing--I mean, word for word, it was basically DFAIT presenting the Colombian government's presentation.
There was a whole range of things completely excluded, such as the fact that violent forced displacements in Colombia are at record levels and they are higher than anywhere else on earth. They also excluded the scandal around the Colombian secret police.
This is information that has just come out. A journalist, who had her 10-year-old daughter threatened by the Colombian secret police, was quoted as saying, “They called saying they would leave her fingers all over my house, that they would rape her. Sometimes I received 70 threats in one day.” She was considered a threat because she was investigating the murder of a renowned Colombian journalist. She later found out that the threats came from the DAS, the Colombian secret police.
This was evidence that was presented. The DFAIT presentation did not in any way touch on the secret police scandal. We have independent electoral observers saying that fraud and coercion and widespread fear among the Colombian population are all part of the factors that impede free and fair elections in Colombia. Again, that wasn't in the DFAIT presentation at all. Yet, when the DFAIT presentation mirrors what the Colombian government says, we are supposed to accept the idea that an amendment where the Colombian government reports on itself, and the Canadian government rubber stamps it, as being somewhat significant in some way.
Do you think this process is credible in any way? I'd like a very brief answer, because I have questions on our industry proposals.