Yes, Mr. Chair, I can answer the question.
I'll start with an overview, because I don't have the statistical analysis in front of me. It would be significantly heavy, women to men. In fact, I think it's a bit disproportionate that there were 18 labour-trafficked victims in Hamilton alone. There were two other male victims that I'm aware of, that I can think of off the top of my head, which, if my math is correct, makes it probably a 90%-10% split female to male.
The other component would be, surprisingly to me, that most of the women are domestics. They are Canadians. Most of the population thinks there are people coming here to be nannies who become trafficked. It's not true. The majority of trafficked people are Canadian citizens.
There is a large pull from rural to urban. In the book written by Ms. Nagy—a guide written for police officers—places like Tim Hortons at 10 o'clock in northern Ontario are classic places to find an aboriginal young woman who, if somebody shows her attention, will apparently go to lovely Toronto, Halifax, Edmonton, or Vancouver with the promise of great wealth.