Yes. The other thing is, of course, that you can use the sanctions in a very political way. I'm talking now about the sanctions regime versus trying to freeze the assets of someone who's taken them through criminal activity. You can say, as I think has been done in some instances, that you're going to sanction all of the members of the cabinet in Russia or you're going to sanction because you feel that they're contributing towards the aggression in Crimea, for example, or annexation. There's nothing wrong with taking that as the policy basis on which you are applying the sanctions. You simply have to be very specific that this is the aim of it, and then the list is based on people who fit those criteria, people who are ministers or whatever it may be, or officials.
There's nothing inappropriate with using it in that fashion. Then you have to allow them to challenge that by saying no, they're not a minister, or challenge whether or not the particular assets belong to them in that context.