Thank you.
Generally speaking, Canadian support is going to continue to be useful in terms of ratification, financial support, and other support to make the court well known, and in terms of complete cooperation at the request of the court—but for the time being, that is in the hands of the prosecutor, not of the judges.
Of course, an important obstacle right now in bringing people to justice is the situation of great instability in the regions in which we operate. It does require the support of all states that have something to contribute—information or other means. A country, for example, offered a plane to bring back the first suspect from the Congo to The Hague. This is clearly not work that one single country can do; it has to be a system in which several countries do cooperate to bring support to the court.
Again, I'm not in a good position to detail this, because a large part of this work is now being conducted in the prosecutor's office, while I'm the president and a judge working in a different area.