Thank you very much for this question and for mentioning my dearest friend Victoria Amelina. She was killed by a Russian rocket last year in Kramatorsk. She is a great example of a Ukrainian writer who started to document Russian war crimes. She knew that with her efforts, being human, she couldn't stop this war, but without her efforts, nothing can be stopped.
When we speak about a special tribunal, we have to describe the problem. The problem is that no international court can prosecute Putin and those around him for the crime of aggression. That is why we have to establish a special tribunal with the aim of preventing wars in the future. It's a signal to the future that if you start a war, regardless of whether you win or lose, you will be punished. Not only would it provide legal measures for wars, but it would make wars senseless.
It would be important to create this special tribunal on the premises of international organizations, because we can imagine Putin creating his own tribunal in white Venezuela, Iran, Nicaragua, Syria or Eritrea. That's why we're working on two tracks: either to create such a special tribunal on the premises of the UN, which would mean we'd need a majority of votes, which is difficult, or create this special tribunal on the premises of regional international organizations like the Council of Europe.