The question of political prisoners in Iran is, of course, a priority in our work at the Raoul Wallenberg Centre. As to the jurisdiction of the ICC, I think the special prosecutor has responded to that.
I'll use this occasion to say that in the room today, we have with us Evgenia Kara-Murza, who appeared before this committee. Since she appeared before this committee, as you know, her husband, Vladimir Kara-Murza, has been sentenced to 25 years in prison. Part of that sentence relates to the work the special prosecutor does, in the sense that he was charged with treason for his critique of Russia's criminal aggression in Ukraine, accompanied by international crimes.
We see political prisoners really as a looking glass into the present historical inflection moment, which I can sum up in one sentence: We're witnessing a resurgent global authoritarianism, the backsliding of democracies, assaults on human rights, and political prisoners, who are not only a looking glass, but the torch-bearers of the struggle for human rights and international justice, and therefore a priority on the justice agenda.