Absolutely. There a number of them, but the one that I'll really emphasize today.... Well, I'll emphasize two. The first one is human rights sanctions. The United States sanctioned a number of officials, in Hong Kong in particular, for their crackdown on the democracy movement there. I was a political prisoner for four months in Hong Kong, and there are still many of my friends and our fellow movement folks over there. About 1,800 people have been political prisoners, at last count. The U.S. has a program to sanction officials who were involved in eliminating Hong Kong's autonomy, as well as in cracking down on democracy and human rights there. We would very much like to see Canada, the EU and Britain join those sanctions to ensure that these officials feel some punishment for that—that's number one.
Number two is more with respect to the report here. As I mentioned in the opening statement, Canada now, very recently, as of last year, changed its laws to allow for secondary sanctions. Previously in Canada—with respect to, for example, the Russia sanctions—it was sanctioning Russian companies and individuals, and there would need to be a separate sanctions regime to, for example, sanction Hongkongers for what they were doing in Russia. That's no longer the case. The law has changed, and so secondary sanctions can be issued. The U.S. issued some of these—not enough—and we pushed them very hard on that, as well as the EU. We would like to see Canada—and this would be a very easy thing to do—at least catch up to those U.S. and EU sanctions. Where investigators there have already completed those secondary sanctions investigations, Canada could join them very easily. We would also really like to see countries like Canada take the lead in pressing their allies to do more on this front.