I think we'll never get rid of ghost consultants and there's a myriad of reasons why. First of all—and I'll try to translate this from Punjabi—ghost consultants suck the blood of their own. They victimize their own communities, whether the Chinese, Vietnamese, or Indian.
There are barriers for those individuals who might be vulnerable, aged, lacking in education, or having other impediments, and they're not going to come forward. Because they're not going to come forward, we're just not going to have prosecution even if we have sufficient resources for prosecution, which we don't. We, apparently, don't even have sufficient resources to combat marriage fraud.
We're not going to get rid of ghost consultants, and I would suggest—and I'll refer to the Metro Toronto Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic's brief on this matter as well as my experience on the radio—that we really need to reach out to the ethnic communities via their media, radio, etc., and talk about this pernicious problem of ghost consultants.
Prevention has to be the best sort of cure. I don't think after-the-fact exercises and prosecution of someone who's obviously a crook or a criminal is going to deter it.