Deputy Speaker, the hon member of the DA should know that the National Conventional Arms Control Committee, NCACC, operates in accordance with the Constitution and the law that was passed by this Parliament in 2002. We have many committees in there. We have a scrutiny committee that prepares documentation that consists of relevant government departments like Trade and Industry, International Relations and Co-operation, Defence and State Security. It report to the NCACC, which I am chairing. From time to time we come to Parliament to report, like we did when we were called upon to do so. We report to Cabinet, and we also make an annual report to the United Nations organisation.
None of these structures have ever, even on one day, indicated to us that there was something wrong with the work of the NCACC. So, maybe the portfolio committee needs to do the hon member a favour by providing him with a copy of the Constitution, the Act, the relevant clauses of the United Nations and all the reports that have been submitted by this committee. We are also going to, later this month, report in terms of the law that says we must make quarterly reports. We are going to do so. We never said we were not going to make any of these reports available. I have also taken a decision that the reports that were given previously should be made public. There is nothing controversial about any of the matters that we are dealing with. But, in instances where there are commercial agreements and confidential agreements between parties involved, we will not reveal this information. This is all in accordance with the law that this Parliament has passed.