Thank you, Chair.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for being here today and for helping us put some precision to this good-faith piece of legislation. Having a math degree and a law degree, I see a lot of fuzziness in this, although it is well intentioned.
I appreciate what you said in terms of genocide and how we need to have some form of a concrete definition or a concrete standard. In the House of Commons, we sometimes have motions. For example, on the genocide relating to the Uighurs, we voted in name. Sometimes we have a unanimous consent motion that's put out to the Commons where nobody objects and it passes. At other times, we have committees that look at the issue.
You mentioned that the 40-day reporting would be challenging when it comes to Magnitsky sanctions. Can you walk us through what's required in order for us to actually have a sanction installed in the books, and whether or not that is actually possible within 40 days?