Well, of course, drawing comparisons is always invidious, and no comparison is exact. Unfortunately for the Tutsi victim population, of course, they were a captive population.
There had been a long history of incitement to hatred in discourse within Iran, I guess you could say.
Mugesera, unfortunately, is still in Canada. I should say that I intervened in the Mugesera case for B’nai Brith, so I'm very familiar with that case. Mugesera's speech came long before the genocide, which was one of the issues, that is, whether there was a linkage between the genocide and his speech, because it came so long before.
I think one of the lessons I would draw from Rwanda is that incitement to genocide can be coded. It isn't necessarily always “kill all these people”. I think that was part of the problem in dealing with the incitement to genocide in Rwanda. It was in the local language and it was often in coded references like “send these people down the river” and so on. Outsiders wouldn't necessarily know what people were talking about.
I'm sorry if my answers are too long, Mr. Chair.