Okay.
There are a couple of different strategies that one can adopt with regard to the diaspora. One is simply to issue a warning. We did have this happen a number of months ago. Almost a year ago several of the embassies in and on Somalia made statements to the effect that citizens of their country who were also holding public office in Somalia were accountable to its laws. They made that very clear. That was just a kind of a reminder that they hoped would send the appropriate message.
One could certainly go further and start to investigate and collect enough information that some individuals could be indicted for anything from tax evasion to murder and everything in between. At that point, you as a government would have the choice of either acting on that or using that as leverage to try to encourage behaviour change on the part of those individuals.
I can't stress enough how diasporized the Somali government is. Most of the top figures—not all, but most—are citizens of a second country, which is actually a source of tension in Somalia itself. Some of the Somalis who, as they put it, stayed under the sun—that's their expression for those who don't have a passport—resent the extent to which the government and the private sector appear to be dominated by people who are coming back from other countries.
I'll reinforce the message I gave before: the vast majority of Somalis coming back from the diaspora are doing great work. They're good people trying to make a difference, but for the ones who aren't, we do have that leverage.