With regard to the definition of organized crime, the UN treaty on organized crime defines organized crime as anything involving three or more people. In this particular case, there's a lot of what we might consider to be organized crime on a large scale, but it's hard to differentiate that from others. I think I would agree with Mr. McDougall that there's a wide variety of different types of human trafficking, and those will depend on region and area. There are instances of children, for example, being forced to work in mines. You also have sexual slavery. These things differ from place to place.
Your point is a good one, but our inability to respond to you is also undermined by the fact that, as Mr. McDougall said in his initial comments, much of this is essentially a series of issues related to crime, and it's only recently that people have been prepared to come out and actually deal with the authorities and self-identify. It's hard to track, particularly in India, where it's a relatively new thing, what the phenomenon actually is. Measuring it is a real difficulty, and I think that will be an essential part of your work.