Mr. Speaker, on January 21, I repeated the question on cigarette smuggling I had already asked I do not know how many times. I never found the answer satisfactory, but we finally have an explanation in the admission made by the leader of the government this week.
The important thing about this cigarette smuggling affair must not escape us-and I was the first to ask the Prime Minister questions about the possibility of reducing taxes to help Quebec solve its cigarette smuggling problem.
First, the Minister of Finance answered for the Prime Minister and said: "There is no way we are going to lower taxes". Then, the Prime Minister told me: "Maybe we will lower taxes. We are discussing it with the provinces". Later on, I was told: "We probably will lower taxes". Finally, the government did lower taxes as requested by the Premier of Quebec.
On the same issue, when I explained to the Prime Minister how serious the cigarette smuggling problem was in Quebec, he first told me: "Oh! cigarette smuggling is not such a serious problem in Quebec. The RCMP is taking care of it". Then, I was told: "Yes, there is smuggling, but everything is under control. Shipments are being intercepted by the RCMP and maybe the problem will eventually disappear". Later on, I was told: "Yes, there is smuggling, but the hon. member will not convince us that it is the native people who are engaged in this kind of activity. There is smuggling, the RCMP are doing their job, but it is not necessarily the Indians that are doing the smuggling, as the hon. member for Roberval says". And finally, they came to recognize that "yes, there is smuggling. Yes, it is being done mostly through the Akwesasne reserve".
They also finally admitted, when the Solicitor General answered a question I asked, that the RCMP were recovering 80,000 boxes of cigarettes. Just imagine what that represents. A quick tally showed that this amounted to a tiny percentage of the cigarettes smuggled into Canada.
This week, when the Prime minister announced the plan, the RCMP finally recognized that it was able to control barely 1 per cent of all cigarette smuggling throughout Canada.
The Minister of Environment was talking earlier to my colleague about transparency. The cigarette smuggling issue is a fine example of smoke screens. This is an example of an issue on which we, the opposition, with our little means, have had to try and get information every day, every minute, every moment this House has given us to finally uncover the truth, to shed some light on a serious problem which was really disturbing Quebecers.
In conclusion, I simply want to say that there are two other problems concerning the smuggling of cigarettes which have not been solved by the Prime minister. He has not done all his homework yet. He has not succeeded in convincing premiers of other provinces to join in the plan, which would have been essential. Now that he is only halfway there, Ontario will become the linchpin of smuggling activities in Canada.
And then he has not succeeded in meeting with the Indian reserve leaders to prevent any sad incidents which could take place. We are now being told that the Solicitor General has done his job.
It is disturbing to see such openness. It is disturbing to see that one has to wring scarce information out of this Parliament.