This is the other issue that I think Mr. Justice O'Connor was quite clear on. He said this is a foggy area of international law. It's a new thing. The world has really changed in the past 30 years, 40 years, 50 years. We've seen massive movements of people around the world. Canada, like many other countries, has a law that permits you to retain the citizenship of your former country. Even were you to remove that, some would say, some countries would still consider you to be their citizen, because under their law you may be.
So there's a certain limited amount of coercion that the Government of Canada can do. If you're a Canadian living in Canada but you happen to be Irish and you happen to have a relationship with the law for some reason, we would just treat you as a Canadian going through the legal process. Maybe the Irish would come to us and say, “Hang on a minute, this guy's Irish and we're going to insist on his being Irish”, and we'd say, “Good, he's Irish, but he's still going to go through the legal system.” That's just one example.
The fact is that many countries are struggling with the concept of dual nationality, predominant residence--who are you?--where there are half-and-half citizenships. The reality is that we haven't concluded that. This is something that the international community is going to have to agree to.
The Vienna Convention on Consular Relations was done at a time when the numbers of dual nationals were minimal. Maybe one of the things to look at down the road is whether that or other international treaties have to look at the reality of dual nationals in a changing world where migration is a factor of life.
I'm sorry I can't be more specific on that. It's a very unspecific topic right now.