Yes, I can comment to say that I think this is where we feel that there's a reason for a strong human rights approach to extradition. All sorts of human rights bases need to be considered with respect to a surrender decision.
There is the past example in Canada of the Hurley case, where the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Minister of Justice did actually discuss what conditions should be placed on the surrender to a country where there was a concern of systemic discrimination against, in that case, a gay man.
I think the continued use of conditional extradition, which we are seeing more often, does require this consideration. It's not just a “yes or no, shall we surrender?”, but surrender on conditions to address the risk to the individual. There is some past practice on that. Of course, if the concern in the other country is of such a high risk, then I think there's a situation where conditions won't address that, and that's an example where one should refuse extradition.
Over to you, Alex.