Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. It's nice to be in your committee today.
Thank you for being here, Minister.
Thank you, all of you, for being here and providing your testimony.
I have to say that I worked for about 20 years in the non-profit international development and humanitarian sector before I became a politician, so after 18 months of waiting for this legislation, I was expecting something good. Unfortunately, that's not what I see with Bill C-41, so forgive me, but I will speak with my international development hat on today.
You spoke about the balance needed between preventing funding going to terrorists versus helping humanitarian.... With all due respect, Minister, you got the balance wrong on this one. I say this for a number of different reasons.
First of all, we're creating barriers to humanitarian aid. I wrote to you immediately when this legislation came forward, and I didn't get much of a response. I outlined exactly why this legislation doesn't do what you think this legislation should do. I have lots of concerns about how it will be implemented and how we are going to get an overstretched and under-resourced Global Affairs Canada to do this work.
Ultimately, what this does is interfere with international humanitarian law. You talked about the balance. You talked about how this was the best thing you thought could happen.
Why do you think the Canadian government felt that this was the best thing to happen, when we look at governments like Australia, the EU, New Zealand, Switzerland, the U.K. and the United States, and they all listened to the experts in their field? They listened to the experts who do this work, who asked for a humanitarian carve-out.
Why did Canada choose to not go with a humanitarian carve-out when, very clearly, other countries did? I think we all know that other countries know exactly what they are doing on the ground. They have respect for humanitarian assistance. They have respect for anti-terrorism legislation.
However, Canada is the only one that put barriers up for humanitarian organizations, instead of making it easier for them to be on the ground, doing the work and helping Afghans.