Certainly. I have a list, but unfortunately the highlighting didn't print out, so I can't say the 10 exactly. I might be able to identify some of them. You may be surprised to hear the countries that are included. Off the top of my head, I know that France is included and Austria is included. I'm trying to identify some. I'll send the list to the committee, because I have it.
What was identified, and I think it's important, is that in the current context, there are multiple countries that have been cited by the UN for expanding counterterrorism laws that violate human rights, often in the pursuit of their critics. We have seen some countries that have more populist governments bringing in these kinds of laws in order to, as I said, silence critics and target minorities.
There's a rise that we've been seeing that is perhaps.... For a period after 9/11, there was a rise in these types of laws, and then a decrease. In the last few years, we've seen a new increase in countries that wouldn't necessarily, at first glance, be on our list of countries whose counterterrorism laws we would have to be worried about, but they are bringing in new laws that engage in indefinite detention, that allow for the use of intelligence and unsourced information and that engage in activities that would be considered tantamount to torture.