Oh, okay.
I refer you to those sections sent to the commission against torture.
I'll wrap it up, Mr. Chair, by saying that what makes this bill even more unacceptable is the fact that none of the recommendations made by Judge O’Connor in his Arar inquiry report, more than a year ago, have been implemented. He recommended an oversight and review agency for all of the agencies collecting security intelligence information. That has not been done. If it had been done, we might have more faith in the type of information that was being put forward for security certificates.
I guess my final word is that Bill C-3 does not meet the requirements of the judgment of the Supreme Court, the nine to nothing judgment last February. I was going to deal with the question of how we deal with Canadian citizens. We have to go before the courts under the criminal justice system, and they may be as bad or worse than landed immigrants or non-citizens, but we have to prove the case against them in a court of law, according to all the rules of due process, Mr. Chairman, and that's not the case here.