Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Prosecutor, thank you so much for being with us today. I'm very pleased to have the opportunity, through your visit, to reunite with two esteemed colleagues.
If you had not done so, esteemed colleague Mr. Cotler, I would have acknowledged the presence in our distinguished audience of Ms. Kara‑Murza, whom I went to greet earlier.
The International Criminal Court has recognized that it has no police or law enforcement forces of its own and therefore must rely on member states, states that are parties to the treaty, to execute the judgements decreed by the court.
A representative of the government of Hungary was quoted as saying that Hungary could not arrest President Putin on the grounds that the Rome Statute is not part of the Hungarian legislative framework.
In your view, is this sufficient justification to avoid submitting to the court's judgements?