There's a whole range of responses. What Sergeant Lowe has described as RCMP policy is very important. It's costly and difficult to achieve, because it relies on having good relationships with other countries. That is because the protection in another country is not going to be offered by the RCMP; it's going to be offered locally. If you look at the rest of the planet, there's a whole range. There are documented cases of victims returning to Myanmar who were given cyanide at the border because they had contracted HIV/AIDS. There are victims returning to Canada from other countries who receive all kinds of assistance and help and protection.
So there's a whole range of things, but repatriation is a very sensitive part of our response. It's a difficult one. It's one that only works with good cooperation with other countries, and in many countries there are no services available, so you can have all the agreements you want with that country.... Basically, people have to rely on the little there is when they go back, in terms of medical services or in terms of whatever other services are available. It's a complicated issue, again.