On domestic, I mentioned in my main testimony that the difficulty is that in these busts, too often handcuffs do go on the victim.
Timea is saying it's getting better—it is getting better—but to take her own statistics, she said that 60% to 65% of the time that doesn't happen. Well, do the arithmetic. It means that over a third of the time it does happen.
In any other context, if a third of the time we were arresting the victim, there would be an outcry. We shouldn't be doing it a third of the time; we shouldn't be doing it 1% of the time.
There is a very long way to go there. There are needs for mental health services to be provided to women when they're domestic victims. That's all the more important for the foreign victims. The foreign victims can get temporary resident permits, but they don't get housing. They don't necessarily get translation services. The temporary resident permit does not automatically come with work permission; you probably need a lawyer to help you apply for that.
This is on the face of the current policy: CIC's guide IP 1 in this area, section 16. I recommend that you look at it.
More needs to be done to make the process more sensitive, whether you are domestic or foreign. That's my point.