I'm happy you knew in advance that it was an unfair question. I can't really answer most of that, other than to say that there's no such thing as a perfect piece of legislation, just like there's no such thing as a perfect system in any country.
Obviously there are ways that it could be improved. We would never say otherwise. It does not necessarily mean that we would endorse all of the ways that people are proposing. It's important that changes to legislation are not made just because of one particular case in which somebody didn't like the outcome; you have to look at the entire system and the principles behind it.
When we look at some of the proposals that have come forward from some of the other witnesses, I would ask that we remember that the proposals come from a particular perspective. We also have to look at the perspective of the administration of justice generally. We have to look at the perspective of our international partners. We have to look at the general system of extradition as a whole and the principles behind it, and the fact that without extradition, we are creating a system of impunity whereby criminals can just hide wherever they want to avoid being prosecuted.