We didn't specifically look at that, and I suppose one would hope not, in the sense that clearly the police in the community to which these people are being moved have been informed about their presence and would maintain some level of surveillance on their activities. So yes, one would hope not.
Can I make just one other point? It's a slightly different point, but one of the things we came across when we were discussing the relocation of witnesses was the way communities felt. The people who have agreed to give evidence are, in this country, talked about as “grasses”, people who have broken a kind of local code of having no contact with the police, and by giving evidence and becoming witnesses they have broken that local code. A couple of people said to us, by relocating those witnesses, in a way, the intimidators have won. They have led to these people being excluded from that community.
To put it in slightly more graphic terms, in a sense they've purified those communities of these people who they view as grasses, as people who are prepared to give evidence against other people within the community. That was something that we thought was quite interesting. To some groups, it might be seen that relocating witnesses was actually a victory of sorts for certain groups within the original community.