I haven't looked at that.
It's my view that if a Canadian citizen—and you could be a Canadian citizen and never live here; you could be born of Canadian parents and spend your life abroad.... If it's a Canadian citizen who's suspected of terrorism, you have to use the criminal justice system, the penal system, to accuse them and to convict them of some wrong. As far as I'm concerned, the same process should apply to landed immigrants and non-citizens who are here on a residential status.
As I say, many of them have been here longer. I know landed immigrants who've lived in Canada for 30 years. I know Canadian citizens who, because they were born here on a holiday or because they were born of Canadian parents, have hardly been in Canada at all. They would benefit from one system, and then you have another system for the people who are not Canadian citizens, which suspends all the due process system.
My argument is that we should have one system for everybody, and that's the penal system.