Well, they could in part be from Canada. With respect to the Zahra Kazemi affair, the Criminal Code clearly provides jurisdiction for Canadian courts where the victim of torture is a Canadian citizen. And I'm dismayed that if two Canadian tourists are killed in Mexico, there is an immediate RCMP investigation, but when a Canadian citizen is brutally tortured and murdered in Iran, there is a tremendous resistance to taking any action.
In the case of Canada, it's an unhappy coincidence, if you like, that one of the most notorious figures in the repression of dissidents also happens to be implicated in the Zahra Kazemi affair. At the international level, there is the possibility of at least discussing before the United Nations Security Council the referral of crimes against humanity committed by the Iranian leadership to the International Criminal Court.
I think the mere discussion of this issue would have an impact, even if we believe it's not politically feasible. The adoption of resolutions that name the particular individuals involved in orchestrating these crimes is, I think, the direction in which both the diplomatic discourse and the prospect of more tangible judicial sanctions should go.