I'm going to start at the very beginning with the question of the person coming to Canada.
I think one of the most immediate tools is the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, that is, the ability to prevent individuals from coming to Canada. Again, it's another department that would need to speak in detail to this, but there are provisions in the act to prevent people from coming to Canada, to render them inadmissible because of violations of “human or international rights”. I think that's the language. That's, I think, one of the first aspects of the legislative framework.
Depending on the circumstances, if you were talking about an individual, and it's a situation where the country is already under sanctions under the Special Economic Measures Act.... Again, we've talked about listings. Listings of individuals are possible under the Special Economic Measures Act as long as you've reached that threshold of it being a situation of a grave breach of international peace and security.
For individuals who are responsible for wrongdoing in some manner or another, the usual processes of law are available as long as you can make the necessary connections to Canadian jurisdiction. That would be a question, I think, better put to the Department of Justice. As I said, I know that one of the questions that came from the chair was to get a sense from the Department of Justice of the range of legal instruments that might be available.