I'll comment on the other items that Dominic didn't comment on. I want to talk about domestic servitude and forced labour.
It's interesting that when we hold these public campaigns and we talk to people, they step forward and they say, “I know someone who was victim of this”. There is always somebody who comes up, or it's two, three, or four people at a time, and they bring up the domestic servitude situations. They're just unaware. They think they're just trapped and that this is a civil arrangement and that it's okay. It's like opening those floodgates, and the parallels to domestic violence are very clear when we talk about that. I'm quite sure that issue will come forward and will be something we'll have to deal with on a regular basis.
When we talk about forced labour, I was personally involved in a case involving 10 Chinese nationals who were smuggled into Canada for the purpose of growing marijuana. They were stuck on a farm in Manitoba, and they were forced to grow, harvest, package.... We seized over six tonnes of marijuana and we know that they were operating there for more than two years. That's forced labour. That's slavery.
Initially, when we looked at that investigation, it didn't even cross our radar screen because it was so many years ago. But now when we talk about that incident, we would have probably changed the whole focus of that investigation from a marijuana trafficking investigation to a slavery investigation. So it shows you where we end up when we start talking about these things and having these difficult conversations.