Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank Mr. Browder for his testimony. It was quite compelling. I think it's something we need to share with all Canadians so that they'll be aware of what is in fact happening in Russia.
I have heard of this case, and many other cases, and frankly, I'm mystified as to why people still want to do business in Russia, other than that they have large natural resources. Given all the frightening things that have happened—not just with Mr. Magnitsky, but I've also heard of many other similar cases, though not to the same extent—it still seems like a frightening place, the wild west of doing business, where anybody who opposes the oligarchy gets himself into trouble.
Maybe you can comment on that as well, but what I really wanted you to focus on in our brief time, limited to nine minutes, is the bill that's before the U.S. Congress and the Senate, the Justice for Sergei Magnitsky Act of 2010, and talk about whether it could be incorporated, in similar language, into the one that Professor Cotler is putting forward. I think Professor Cotler put it quite succinctly when he said that this is a looking glass into the culture of corruption and impunity in today's Russia.
Could you please comment on that?