With some forms of sexual abuse, the police themselves can be a problem because, for instance, if sexual abuse is in the home, sometimes the police in South Asia will say this is a family matter. When it comes to this sort of abuse, which is outside the home, it's less of a problem. There are always potentially corrupt police, but that's less of a problem.
I would say with respect to relying on the police to deal with this, obviously, they should, but I think more needs to be done than that.
One of the things we've tried to do in Canada through Beyond Borders is the man-to-man campaign where we try to get men involved, because very often there is a kind of glorification of sexual hyperactivity within the male population. So peer pressure among men, not just among youths, that this is the wrong thing to do is helpful.
That's something we've been very active in doing in Canada, trying to get high-profile male figures, role models, to sort of come out against child sexual abuse, and that hasn't been happening in India. I think that could usefully be done in India. I didn't focus on that, because that's not something we've actually been doing, as ECPAT in India, but we've been doing it in Canada and I think it's a good model for South Asia as well.