Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you, all, for the efforts that are put into helping the situation.
I'm going to address my question to Monica. This is probably going to trigger something, so I'm just warning everybody upfront, please.
Monica, I met with Yazidi individuals, the people who came into my office and my constituency, and one of the stories really touched me. I'm going to go back to what my colleague, Michelle, said about housing.
Two sisters managed to get to Canada. After the older sister witnessed the murder of her husband and children, they were then thrown in jail and continuously raped, and the food that they ate was the remains of their family. I say this because it really impacted me.
However, they were very happy that they were able to come to Canada. Here's the problem. They came to Canada. There was no housing, no medication, no mental health services to help them emotionally get through what they had witnessed. We're promoting this, and you're a champion at this. You obviously care. However, how can we help these people, help the Yazidi people, come here? How can we make these promises? They have nowhere to live, no medication, no help, no counselling. When I think about, we're taking them out of the fire and putting them back into the frying pan. How do we change that?