In fairness, when I look at it, it's a difficult situation because of the huge numbers. When you're talking about two million people, 1.4 million in one country, that's a lot.
When you look at what the world takes in, if my statistics are correct, it's about 100,000 refugees worldwide. So when you compare that number with what we're talking about in real refugees, it's a very small percentage.
Yet when you look at Canada, one of every 10 refugees of that 100,000 come to our country. We do about one-tenth of the load of bringing refugees in, compared to 19 or more countries that take them in. We're doing a fair bit, comparatively speaking.
My sense is that when you compare that with the number of refugees, it doesn't matter if you increase it proportionately; you're still not addressing the issue, which is the huge number of people who are displaced. I'm wondering if the focus shouldn't shift towards providing resources to those regions that are actually dealing with the huge numbers. We can increase our numbers by another 10%, but it's not going to make a significant dent in the refugee situation.