Thank you, Chair. Thank you, witnesses, for being here.
Ms. Henchey, I'm going to ask you about a British Columbia case. It's the case of Jassi Sidhu, who was murdered in India in a so-called honour killing. The people alleged to have committed the murder were her very own mother and her maternal uncle. Those two people made it back to Canada, and they were successfully extradited back to India, but it took 17 years.
In that case, the two accused people argued in Canadian court that they would likely be mistreated in an Indian prison. You were quoted in CBC News. I'll give them the benefit of the doubt that they quoted you correctly. You said:
It undermines the entire concept of extradition and sending people to the country where they have allegedly committed a crime if we refuse to surrender based on imperfections in our treaty partners, even sometimes large imperfections....
First of all, do you remember saying that? Would you mind expanding on that?