When we first receive a request, if it's not from a country that we're very comfortable with and used to dealing with, the first question we ask ourselves is, “Is this a country that we could send somebody safely to?” That will involve consulting with our partners at the Department of Foreign Affairs to ask them what information they have about the conditions in this particular country. If it's not obvious that there's a problem, that may lead us to move on to the next stage, but our first step is to consult with the Department of Foreign Affairs when we're dealing with a country that we're not 100% comfortable with.
Then, as the process goes on, if we don't put an end to it at the outset because of issues, we will, when we get to the ministerial stage, again consult with the Department of Foreign Affairs and consult some of the reports that Mr. McSorley was referring to—human rights reports—to get a sense of what the circumstances would be for this person in the foreign country. The Department of Foreign Affairs is very much involved in that discussion.
Then, if the person is extradited, sometimes they're extradited conditionally, pursuant to assurances. As I mentioned earlier, the Department of Foreign Affairs is responsible for basically dealing with those assurances. If we ask for oversight over the trial, it would be somebody who would be in our mission in that country who would attend the trial to observe, to make sure. Consular affairs are handled by the Department of Foreign Affairs, and Canadian citizens have the right to consular services while they're serving a sentence in another country, so once they're moved to the other country, the Department of Foreign Affairs has the lead.