Thank you very much for this practical question. I don't have an ideal answer for you, but it's about a complex of measures.
First of all, Canada can continue to help develop the capacity for central preliminary documentation and investigation of crimes of aggression. In a future perspective, we will battle children when Russia is punished, and high-level politicians in Russia will know that it's politically and legally tracked for the future. Canada can use more intelligence resources for this tracking, and it will be very helpful.
Then our focus should not be on Russian CSOs. I totally agree with the position that none of the CSOs in Russia are independent, because they are under the legislation about foreign agents and all of them are under monitoring, so I can't trust Russian CSOs, for sure.
Those eyewitnesses who fled from Russia went through the border with Estonia. As I know, there is only one investigator in Estonia who is working on a daily basis on war crimes. They are interviewing people who can be eyewitnesses for all of us, but they are scared that they have already become collaborators or that they will be shamed because if they stayed in Russia for a temporary period, they will have this image of being pro-Russia.
We have to understand that we need support for these territories that are close to Russian borders. We need to cover all eyewitnesses and those who have already left Russian territories and get the testimonies from this audience. We will need to develop trust between these witnesses and law enforcement bodies from territories close to Russia.
The third point is that aside from the tribunal on acts of aggression, which has already started its work, and eyewitnesses, we need to use intelligence. OSINT and other tools are very well developed and you can find people in Russian territories too. Many of them still use mobile phones and cards. If they use them even from time to time, we can find them.
Many of them can potentially testify to Ukrainian authorities, but first of all to our foreign partners, because sometimes they are scared, as I mentioned already, of being collaborators according to Ukrainian legislation. We have to be aware that they are victims too. They need to testify in order to have justice and truth at the end.