I think I addressed this at the start of my remarks. Indeed, what we have seen and what we have been able to document as Amnesty amounts to war crimes and certainly needs to be investigated. In fact, we are calling for the ICC to investigate all these war crimes and crimes against humanity—it's a possibility—but also for a special rapporteur to be appointed for Russia to investigate as well and to report on Russia's human rights violations in Ukraine.
It is clear that, in just a few days, what we've seen is absolutely appalling. We are looking at over 150,000 people who have already fled the country. We have seen children killed, civilians killed, indiscriminate attacks directed to populated areas and cluster munitions—things that are prohibited under international law. All of these crimes are heinous and need to be fully investigated.
I do want to mention something that I think is moving in the right direction. Today, on this case, we saw the emergency General Assembly meeting being convened for the first time in 40 years. I would like to note that in the case of Ukraine, although we're seeing incredible violations on the part of Russia, we're actually witnessing the international system functioning and international law getting into motion. We're seeing a strong response, the kind of response we haven't seen for all conflicts globally, to be honest. I hope this is an opportunity to be able to redress that and to make a shift. We have seen refugees welcomed, actions taken really promptly and sanctions taken very quickly—things we don't see in other crises. I think this crisis certainly sets the benchmark for the future.