Thank you.
Before we go to anything else, I would like to note that, given the time, we're going to have six minutes available for each round of questions and answers. That will allow us to wrap things up and to vote. I think we'll only need a couple of minutes to do the in camera item that has come up, because I think we're merely acting on a consensus. Am I correct? Okay.
I have a couple of preliminary points before we go to our first questioner.
I received a book—I think it's by one of your colleagues—called Why Europe Needs a Magnitsky Law. I'm simply drawing it to people's attention. I'm assuming that it got sent to other members of the committee. If it did not, I have a copy. Our clerk cannot distribute it because it's in one official language only, but you're welcome to come to my office and see it.
Second, before we go on, I want to be clear about this. You made a reference to what has recently been going on in Ukraine, but to be clear, Sergei Magnitsky was a Russian citizen—I assume he was a patriotic Russian citizen—acting out of a desire to make his country a better place for other Russian citizens. This in no way overlapped in any respect with current Russian foreign policy, just to be clear.