Thank you, and apologies for that.
Thank you, sir. Yes, I'm happy to speak a bit on the role of the Human Rights Council in addressing a crisis such as that which you've described. The Human Rights Council does...and has been effective in putting in place mandates relating to investigation in a number of situations that were not favoured by the states that were going to be investigated.
It certainly is within the remit of the council and the potential of the council to be able to put in place a mechanism such as that. I'd refer you, for example, to the Syria commission of inquiry, which has been in place for seven years now, despite the objections of the Syrian government and others. Those resolutions are voted on, typically, but it is the case that there have been a number of mechanisms of that sort, and they do very important work in investigating and exposing rights abuses throughout the globe.
The council has 47 members, so it is not within the power of any one member to be able to block that type of action if there is a majority vote.