Yes, I have to agree that commercial exploitation is very important, and even the corruption we see is for commercial profits and benefits.
It will not sound too good, but I will mention the remittances that Bangladesh gets out of some of these people who go abroad and are exploited for labour. The Bangladesh government hasn't made any provisions. The Bangladesh government, in fact, encourages the practice and says that it is consensual. It is indeed consensual; however, when they go to the different countries, particularly the Middle East, there is nobody to protect them. There is no international law that can protect them. Nobody watches them. UNODC is responsible for human trafficking, but at the same time, there's nobody watching properly.
I've met people who have returned from abroad—from the Middle East, women particularly—who have said there is social stigmatization against them. They haven't necessarily been prostituted. They were working, but at the same time, when women go to Arab countries like that, there is a social stigma. They say our government and some of the non-governmental organizations should help them, but I think there is a profit motivation for the Government of Bangladesh in the form of the remittances, and they will not really make any moves to do anything.