That's entirely correct. They're political in the sense that specialty relations are countries [Technical difficulty—Editor], so it's one country saying to the other, “We will only prosecute for these things.” The death penalty requires an assurance, a diplomatic assurance, if there's a risk of one country saying to the U.K., “We won't impose a death penalty.” If there's been an earlier extradition request from another country, then it's the [Technical difficulty—Editor] competing international obligations.
If that's right, everything else has now been moved to the courts. That's happened probably over a period of time, but it's now completely clear that all of the rest of it is held by the court to deal with.