That's, I believe, a difficult choice, but it's a case that's quite common in Tibet. The list of people who are detained is not public. The number I mentioned earlier—2,000—is, I would say, a very small fraction of the overall number. I would guess there are thousands more Tibetans who are detained, yet we do not know their identities or the rationale behind their arrests.
Whether we should make the list public or not.... I would recommend that the list become public, so we at least know stories. The problem, as I mentioned earlier, is that we do not know enough about the stories coming out of Tibet.