I think the Sri Lankan government has made its position very clear. Even just reading the newspapers this morning after the Commonwealth heads of government meeting, we see that the local pro-government papers were declaring it a victory for Rajapaska. They have been fighting tooth and nail against any type of international mechanism, any type of international accountability.
Even during the time when the war was going on and organizations like Human Rights Watch were concerned about the level of abuses, we were fighting for a UN human rights office presence to monitor what was happening in the field. The government fought that. There was never any High Commissioner for Human Rights presence able to do that monitoring. We've seen the same kind of approach again now against an international commission of inquiry.
I think we really need to recognize that the government isn't necessarily going to cooperate, but that there are a lot of effective ways in which such an international mechanism can still conduct its investigations, even if it doesn't have cooperation from the Sri Lankan government.