What we are doing is joining the vast majority of other countries in basically ruling out facilitation payments, together with Australia, which is now looking at doing the same thing as Canada, and New Zealand, which is in a similar position and probably will be along the same track soon. The U.S., we know, are looking at it, but they have their own ways of dealing with things. We would be practically the only country left in the OECD grouping that has facilitation payments, so we've joined the other countries that have totally outlawed facilitation payments.
What we're trying to do is build a culture and a value system in how businesses deal with their issues. You've raised a question of the prosecutions. While I dare not tread on the toes of the Canadian prosecution service, I would suggest that their objective would be to look at companies trying to influence business deals, and that is where they would focus their intentions.
I don't think the objective of the legislation, either in the past or in the future, would be to stop people from giving a bottle for Christmas or a tip to a tour guide or something like that. Clearly, this—