I believe we understood eventually that the RCMP had concerns about Mr. Arar. At the time that we were dealing with him at the consular level, which is the basic front line response that the government has to citizens, we were unaware of all the background to this. We were dealing in a small, tight timeframe to ensure that this individual received consular protection. This included ensuring that he had a lawyer, which was done; ensuring that his family was in contact with him, which it was; and ensuring that the U.S. government knew that we were concerned about this individual, which it did.
Regardless of that, the U.S. government removed him to Syria. Since then we have been putting processes in place to avoid that happening again, internally and with the U.S. government.