Okay.
First, whether someone was or was not a Canadian-transferred detainee is a very important issue. We were not able to determine that. We had no way of believing that these people that Richard saw in Kabul were Canadian-transferred detainees, so as a result we worked on a database that started from any arrest of a detainee right through to his being placed in the Afghan justice system. We developed a database where we could speak with confidence.
The AIHRC report you speak to is a report on the causes of torture, and something like 300 and some people are identified. I think in the report you'll find they are self-identified victims of torture, so the high percentage is because they were self-identified. There were issues with the methodology of that report, but we've never disputed that there were significant problems in the Afghan system.
At PCO, the Foreign and Defence Policy Secretariat has an Afghanistan officer. They had one when I was there and they had one afterwards. They were part of a big interdepartmental community that consulted on these issues, but my dealings were with PCO.
Thank you.