That's the dilemma, Mr. Bachrach, in a nutshell: We don't know. The process by which these people were identified, investigated, indicted, charged and tried, if they have been.... We don't know what process.... We heard first that it was six. Then it was something more than six. Then it was 10. It's all [Inaudible—Editor] box. The judicial system is entirely opaque. Therefore, how can you ever know if justice has been properly served?
When you're dealing with a regime that does not have an independent air-accident investigation system.... That is the case in Iran. It's an integrated part of the government; it's not an independent investigative body like our Transportation Safety Board, for example. Kathy Fox and her team are entirely independent of the Government of Canada, but in Iran that's not the case. The investigation is, in effect, a part of their department of transport. Similarly, the judicial system is entirely opaque. You don't know who's being charged with what, or what the process is to determine their guilt or innocence.
The short answer to your question is that when you have that kind of a regime, you're always going to have serious doubts about whether you're ever getting the truth.