Thank you.
I do think that there is obviously a benefit in coordination. I think there is a fair amount of coordination now, but to your point, and getting back to the arguments that Professor Charron has been making about transparency and reporting, that's rather difficult to do in a coordinated fashion.
If you look at the United States, you see that OFAC does report and does produce a great deal of information. That information may overlap and they may be reporting on an individual who is designated both under American sanctions law and by Canada, but Canada has to do its own reporting.
In my view, that individual deserves to know what evidence Canada is designating them for and on what basis they are being designated. That's a little bit more difficult to coordinate. It may be that there's information sharing between the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada, for example, but at the end of the day, Canada still has to produce the information and the reporting.
When you talk about the—