I can give you only a partial analysis there.
As far as I'm aware, and I was the High Commissioner in Bangladesh a few years ago, the human smuggling trade out of Bangladesh is largely workers, not sex workers, and they are largely going into India, because the economy is much more vibrant in India. We're talking about millions of people illegally smuggled into India as workers.
The biggest example in Nepal is the one I gave, which was that when the economy collapsed after the 2015 earthquake, there was a major movement out of Nepal—not so much into India, although there are many Nepalese working in India, but through India to the Gulf states and the Middle East, again as workers.
In regard to your preliminary statement, although as I say the numbers are soft, our indications are that much of the labour-related human smuggling—indentured labour—in India is in fact internal. It has more than a billion people. It's such a big country that it in fact has its own internal human smuggling markets, which are very significant.
In general I would agree with you that most of the human smuggling we're looking at is international, but India is one of those places that are so big it's like they have their own climate: it has its own human smuggling network.