First of all, Monsieur Petit, this particular bill doesn't apply to refugees. This is strictly with respect to people caught up in the criminal justice system.
I don't know if I can enlarge much more on what Mr. Bird had to say in terms of the safeguards that are in place through Interpol, but you're quite correct with respect to your comments about Canada being a welcoming place. A bill like this is not intended, nor do I think it should be, to get into other realms of identification. It's confined to what I think most people understand DNA can and should be used for, and that is for the detection of crime and the solving of crime, and that's basically what it does.
As I say, Mr. Bird can add anything he likes in terms of what we do in the international sphere, but there are the usual protocols and safeguards in place. But as one of our colleagues here said, no matter what safeguards are in place, we must continue to be very, very careful to protect people's civil rights and to be fair to those individuals who are counting on Canada. Sometimes the system doesn't always work, as you know we have experienced. Nonetheless, we must strive to do better.
I don't know if you had any further comment on that, Mr. Bird, or not.