Mr. Speaker, I think that for the adjournment debate I will give some background to put things in context. On September 20, 1994, I questioned the Solicitor General of Canada regarding everything that had gone on in the Bristow and McInnis affairs, the infiltrations of political parties and unions, the investigations of the Canadian Jewish Congress in Toronto and Montreal. The questions were very clear.
In particular, we asked the government to establish a royal commission of inquiry to shed light on the whole matter. I also asked who controlled the monster that the Canadian Security Intelligence Service seemed to have become, since no one seemed able to control it anymore or to identify those really responsible, the people committing public funds, taking action. There does not seem to be anyone responsible for it in Parliament.
We rarely obtain any answers to this question, as you well know, and so we turned to SIRC, the Security Intelligence Review Committee. Since September 20, there have been discussions in the sub-committee, witnesses have been called, the CSIS inspector is conducting an investigation, the Sub-committee on National Security has heard witnesses, and so on. And now, on December 9, we are told, SIRC will be submitting its report to the Solicitor General of Canada.
Mr. Speaker, you know that we have our reservations about SIRC, stacked as it is with political appointees, the majority being Conservatives who are looking into activities that were conducted in the 1990s by Conservatives. One cannot be judge and jury at the same time. Our reservations notwithstanding, we are looking forward to reading SIRC's report very attentively.
What I am asking the Solicitor General of Canada this evening is that he submit the complete text of this report to the Sub-committee on National Security, with no deletions, in its entirety, so that we ourselves, given our solid representation on the sub-committee, may judge whether the work has been done properly, whether SIRC has carried out its mandate, which is to reassure us that it has looked into what was done in the cases I mentioned earlier, with respect to Bristow and anything to do with infiltration activities by CSIS.
What I am requesting, and I hope that we are going to obtain it, is an unaltered copy so that our representative on the Sub-committee on National Security can question people and obtain satisfaction in this matter.
I think that it is extremely important, given that we have not been able to have a royal commission of inquiry established, that we at least be able to examine this report in its entirety.