It happens both ways. Typically they will take them out of the country, but it is also happening right here. As I said in my opening remarks, these have not been tracked. So some work needs to be done on getting statistics, and that once the awareness is there, that these girls are able to speak out, or the support systems, the social workers or educational systems that know about this to speak out. I'll give you a very quick example. When girls are taken out of the school system for prolonged periods of time no questions are raised when that is done by those from a particular culture. It's understood that in this culture a girl may be taken out of school and then taken out of education. I had a young Canadian girl email me who said that she and her three sisters were forced to stay home and told that everything outside was evil and that they would not be not allowed to go to school. But nobody questioned why they were not in school, why they were not being educated.
This is the awareness that needs to be created among social workers, teachers, and medical professionals, those who have first contact with young people. So in answer to your question, it's happening in both places.