andrew wilkie was one of them who had come here and that. and then fact he was here a 2 days ago. he come over from australia, so it's, there is a growing amount of pressure. i think it helps where wherever there is flexibility, i mean at the end of the day, if, if you're of the mind that this is indeed a politically motivated prosecution. and it is political forces which are driving it. then it makes sense that political forces can result in the prosecution being either dropped or, and judges being, being pushed. if he likes feeling the least have the cover to be pushed in the right direction. if they had can interpret something one way or another, it could be just enough to kind of push them along onto the right side. so it's, it is one of those situations where you need legal arguments need political arguments, you need public pressure, you need campaigns. and i mean, it's not an accident that in cases such as these, the more campaigning and public pressure there is, the more likely the cases will find themselves decided in the way that people didn't originally expect. we saw t