Thank you, Chair. I hope we have just a bit more than that. I think we have five minutes left. I have a couple of things.
I just want to point out to our research team, before I ask a question, that one of the things I think we need to deal with in our report at the end is with Dr. Banerjee's testimony today, as well as a couple of briefing notes that we have from today and one earlier.
We have five different figures. We have from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime,150,000 people trafficked; Agape Research notes 150,000 women and girls; the Indian government is saying 20,000 women; the International Labour Organization is saying globally forced labour is 20.9 million, and we know a large percentage of that is from Southeast Asia; and, a global slavery index that Dr. Banerjee introduced has 36 million. I'm wondering if we could try to assemble a graph on that and see if we could get our heads around trying to—I know the numbers are tough—add in our report some legitimacy or veracity to the numbers as best as we can.
There is another issue too, Chair, to focus on as well when we come to our conclusions. Dr. Banerjee mentioned something that we often don't trace, in that the most vulnerable people are women and girls, but in her example, which is a very good one, because of the inequities in economies, a young man becomes victimized by the Taliban or ISIS and then he's the very one who goes about revictimizing women and trafficking them. I think we could try to focus on that, too, to see exactly how much of a problem it is with disenfranchised young boys and men who are becoming part of the problem because of that inequity.
One of the aspects that we have in our briefing note is in regard to—and I think you may have mentioned it, Doctor, and I apologize, as I was trying to listen and make notes—the organ harvesting aspect of it. That brings a different dimension into human trafficking, because it means there is a very sophisticated talent that's required to extract the organ to keep it, of course, safe and alive so that it can actually be transplanted and so it's worth something. Do you have any evidence that this is on the increase in southern Asia?