By all means. We have a personal experience with Ahmadinejad. We have some prominent Austrian parliamentarians who have actually conducted investigations in the involvement of Ahmadinejad in the 1989 assassination, which I failed to mention here. Ahmadinejad, supposedly, was personally involved in that assassination. So Ahmadinejad, as you know, is an IRGC commander, Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, and he's been in charge of the broad outside activities for many, many years. He's been especially trained and worked in Iran and Kurdistan to hunt down Iranian and Kurdish opposition groups, and he was personally involved. There are credible reports that he was involved in that assassination in 1989. So that's one part.
We have a personal experience, but also we definitely welcome any charges. There has to be a lot of effort put into place by a lot of governments and a lot of human rights lawyers, but I'm sure Canada's help in that regard would be very helpful. Who would have thought that someone like the President of Sudan would have been indicted by the International Criminal Court?
I'm not undermining the situation in Darfur and in Sudan, but definitely the human rights condition in Iran is much more grave and much more threatening. I think much of it has to do with all of the Iranian leaders, especially Ahmadinejad being one of them. There are opportunities and there are possibilities, and we definitely, both as a political party and as an organization representing various nationalities--and I think the people of Iran--would welcome such an indictment if anything were put forward.