Absolutely.
Also, just to briefly mention, since you raised the issue of the duration for the visa, I think three years would not be consistent with what other countries do. We'd create some odd incentives perhaps. Our suggestion is that in keeping with international practices, you have a sufficient reflection period, which is really designed to allow those individuals to decide whether they are going to claim refugee status, make some other application, or leave. And 120 days is actually quite good compared to other jurisdictions. If that were all there was, we'd be quite concerned, though. It's really going to come down to how willing the officials are to extend that in appropriate circumstances. The two grounds—I'll just briefly wrap up—are not just willingness to cooperate with prosecution, which we think is quite important, but also in severe cases, where, for whatever reason, that individual can't return. It's actually a balance that's struck in Canadian guidelines that, for example, the Americans don't have.