The mining example is very pertinent, and what we found is that in the industrial sector—which, of course, is what most Canadian mining is—we don't find problems with child labour or forced labour. Where we find child labour in mining is in the artisanal and small-scale sector.
It's a small portion. For example, for gold, it provides 15% to 20% of the world's gold, but that sector employs 40 million people around the world. It provides significant income for many people.
What we found in Ghana, for example, is that many of the artisanal mines are not regulated by the government. One of the recommendations we've made to the Ghanaian government is exactly what you've said: that the government should professionalize this sector, but make the provision of licences to miners contingent on meeting certain human rights standards, including no use of child or forced labour.