I'm not sure it's a matter of countries. It's the persons and what has happened to them in their country of origin—and there are many, many countries where human rights are violated. But it is specific to a person and to his or her country as such. It depends, obviously, on what their facts are, what kind of work they were involved in, why they were tortured or why they were detained, or why there were these violations, but I'm not sure you can specifically say some countries are necessarily worse than others.
Because the kind of work I do allows me to see a cross-section like this and not see clients from this country or that country, and so on, I'm not really the best person to be able to say, but I don't know that you can say that, in some places....
It really depends on the individual and what has happened in his or her country.
Perhaps Richard could comment.