I think you'll understand that, as with law enforcement in Canada, we don't telegraph investigations in advance, because the investigations have to be discreet. There may be witness protection issues and all the rest of it.
You're quite right; we have jurisdiction in most of the countries of the Sahel region and in Sudan and Libya, which were referred by the Security Council. We will use the resources that we have as effectively as we can, realizing that for a number of years, the demands on the office have been too great, the situations have been too many, and the requirement and the burden of proof is properly very high. We're not a human rights documenter where a smell of suspicion is enough to move forward. We have to be as vigorous as we would be if we were presenting a case to the central criminal court here in Ottawa. It has to be a high standard of proof. That's the standard we are holding ourselves to, and that has resource implications.