Thank you very much.
I must say that three minutes isn't a lot to get questions asked.
Welcome, Senator Andreychuk. I haven't seen you for ages. I want to thank you for your work on Magnitsky, but I want to ask a really important question.
We were looking at sanctions to do three things: to change behaviour, to create constraints on any kind of future behaviour and to look at human rights violations. Would you say that sanctions have been working against Russia?
While they may have dealt with behaviour and looked at trade—we looked at economic sanctions—Russia is still taking children from Ukraine, and it's actually almost a cultural genocide. There are children being brainwashed into becoming Russian citizens. That's one huge human rights violation that's going on. The rape of women in Ukraine is another human rights violation that's going on.
Can we say that sanctions are actually working? What do we need to do to move them forward—especially when we have rogue nations like China, Belarus, India and Iran around the area, also trading with Russia at the moment to give it an input—as much as you would like to do so?
You said it takes time—and I agree—but in the interim, while we're taking time, what do we do?
I'm looking at the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which is 57 nation-states, of which Russia and Belarus are two. How do we deal with the central Asian countries in the OSCE? They're silent because they're so dependent on Russia for their well-being and, in fact, their economies.
What do we do about some of those things? Can you tell me how we deal with all of those challenges?