What I wanted to say is that the landing numbers, as indicated by my colleague, are inaccurate because a lot of clients, when they come to Canada, go where their relatives are. In Ontario there seem to be a lot of immigrants settling. It's easier to adapt. The multicultural component in Ontario, especially in Toronto, is huge, and a lot of people are attracted. So even though you send them to Alberta or smaller cities, they end up in Toronto.
To respond to your second question on the needs of European immigrants compared to those of Afghan immigrants, there are so many factors in immigration. First of all is the language issue. If a European refugee or immigrant comes to Toronto, they don't have the language barrier. Still, they have all the other barriers—being new in the country, where to go for services, knowing what services are available, and all that.
The other piece is that there's a difference between the foreign-trained professional and the person who is illiterate who comes from a refugee camp. There is a huge gap. The person who has foreign credentials and speaks the language might need simple guidance on where to go for services, while the person who has language barriers, who has trauma from being in a refugee camp, and who does not have a profession might be a case study where we carry the file for two or three years, compared to the person who is a foreign-trained professional.