Well, we don't forget about it. In the system that is designed now, the initial level of decision-making will be done by a public servant, it's true. As a former public servant, I don't really see anything wrong with that. They will be able to sort out, one would hope, the ones who deserve to go on to the next level. It's possible for someone to go on. In addition to that, remember, they all have the right to seek leave to the Federal Court.
The problem, if you give everybody an appeal, is that you're never going to resolve the system, because you can't have any kind of quasi-judicial body that has levels of appeal that can handle volume. We're getting 30,000 to 40,000 asylum seekers every year. We just can't handle that.
There has to be a fast-track system, as every other country in Europe has found out. I mean, the Germans, in 1993, ended up with 493,000 asylum seekers. They had to change their constitution to try to speed the system up. Now they're using the system that we are now going to adopt.