If you heard me say we did not get co-operation, I don't know where that came from, because we consistently received good co-operation from those who were under investigation throughout my five years. There's no question about that.
It's not about co-operation; it's about what happens after the conclusion has been reached and the report is published. The absence of feedback and visible consequences.... Maybe there are important consequences that we don't see or know about. It's not impossible. That's what I think undermines the credibility of the regime.
After the report is tabled—poof—there is trouble for a few hours or days, and then it's over. It's finished. It disappears.