Thank you very much, Madam Jennings.
To begin with, the act does provide us with the power to initiate a complaint, and we can do that. We have not frequently done it, and we are certainly considering doing it more, based on the encouragement of Professor Moon in his report. We already do have that power.
We don't see a need to take away an individual's right to lay a complaint. That's also there. So there are the two possible streams for getting the case to the tribunal. Our act also does provide that we are to represent the public interest, and we do so before the tribunal. In fact, in the first decade of the commission's existence, in every case of any kind of complaint that went to the tribunal, the commission represented the public interest, but for a number of reasons we no longer do that.
In the vast majority of hate expression cases, we have done that. So we have done that in more than one.