The UNHCR indicates that you can have a designated country of origin process as long as it's based on verifiable and objective information. It does recognize that one consequence of designation can be expedited processing.
In order to meet the criteria as outlined by the UNHCR, we have set up a system that involves two stages. The first is to hit a quantitative trigger. We will set that trigger by ministerial order to be a 75% rejection rate or higher, or a 60% abandonment rate or higher. There will be no requirement for there to be a certain volume of claims coming in.
For fewer than 30 claims, there will be a separate test. Basically, it will be a checklist of verifiable qualities associated with the country, including its ability to have basic democratic freedoms, freely operating NGOs, and an independent judiciary. Once those triggers are hit, there is an analysis. The analysis includes the system of government and also the ability of the state to provide recourse and basic human rights. That will be done by an interdepartmental panel. That panel will be getting information from independent actors, including the UNHCR. That's how we will meet the test provided by the UNHCR in its recommendations.