In developing the bill, as I indicated...and this goes back to 2001. We looked at other laws in other countries. We also had regard to our own legal system, the Canadian Charter of Rights, the jurisprudence, and the existing provisions in the Criminal Code as to how persons who were accused were treated in terms of detention times and periods that they may be held.
We tried to parallel these provisions as much as possible on the existing powers and safeguards that apply to accused persons, and then, as this bill shows, there are a lot more safeguards to deal with persons who would be subject to this act than there are actually applicable to persons who are accused. Persons who are accused do not get the consent of the Attorney General before they are arrested, for example. They do not have oversight. They do not have parliamentary oversight. They do not have ministers who are required to make annual reports.
So actually, even though these are new powers that apply before the normal criminal process would kick into force, we have tried to put in more safeguards to balance the fact that we are into an area, a gap, that has not previously been legislated in.