Thank you for the question.
First, there is a significant differential between sending a Canadian abroad, with the moving and other expenses.... Sometimes, and certainly for our purposes, someone to represent Canada abroad and act as the liaison with other justice departments, both in the Council of Europe and with bilateral relations with particular countries, helping us to facilitate issues that may arise in relation to the development of the law....
We play a very active role. Mr. Piragoff spent a significant amount of his time helping the world have things like an international criminal accord and other laws. We cannot serve those purposes by hiring a locally employed person to act.
That being said, through the deficit reduction action plan, we've looked at our presence abroad, which is very minimal as a department, I must say. We have many officials from Ottawa who travel to participate in international criminal law especially, international trade law, and other kinds of activities.
We decided we could reorganize our presence in Europe to consolidate back to having one person posted and to eliminate that position in Paris. Effectively they are our eyes, ears, and voice. They develop relationships with those countries to help advance our interests in trying to ensure that the world has a more just and orderly system in which Canadians can feel protected wherever they are, and also on bilateral extradition and other related kinds of cases, where there may just be a need for that kind of a personal discussion and explanation. We send Canadians to represent us and carry out that activity. There is no way a locally employed person could do that, because it isn't the kind of administrative or other job that someone from anywhere can do.