Mr. Speaker, I thought what I said was fairly clear. First and foremost, we must find out the causes of crime. Environment is everything. When the environment is a healthy one, we give our young people every opportunity. If they do not have every opportunity, there comes a time in their life when they may well do something wrong. On the other hand, are they always to blame for such action? When the parents are not home, when there is no money and no work, these are all factors.
As to the second question, about identifying, publishing the names of offenders, I am totally against it. This is not the way to remedy things. Let us give our young people access to people who can look after them, experts in various areas, places to stay where people will listen to them and where they can go and talk about their problems.
Let us listen to their demands. You will see that, if we keep listening to them and giving them work, pride will come out on top, and the crime rate, although dropping now-it was at two per cent in 1992 as compared to five per cent in previous years-will continue to drop.