Obviously Colonel Gadhafi needs to face justice for what he has done, and Canada has been very committed to that principle regarding impunity both with the ICC and with respect to Libya itself. We were among the first countries to call for this case at the Security Council to be referred to the ICC and to call for a commission of inquiry at the Human Rights Council as well, so I think it's very clear that we have no support for impunity.
The terms of an eventual peace settlement will depend on the parties on the ground to come to a determination. The Libyan people themselves are really going to have to decide what government structure they want and what transitional structure they want.
More than that I can't say, but I would point out that I worked with a colleague here at the table previously on Bosnia and was in Sarajevo for a couple of years, and I have to hearken back to the case of Ratko Mladic. I turned on my television set after coming back from Libya to find that after 16 years or something, he was arrested. The arrest warrants remain valid and time is long, so whatever happens in the short term, I think we need to focus on the fact that justice has a long memory.