You made a key point there, which was that despite the quick response about the issue, there will still be this concern.
I think that speaks deeply to the history of how these systems work and all of the underlying issues of why women do not speak up, particularly with sexual violence, but also with other kinds of gender-based and intimate partner violence. It's because there are no systems in place to respond to it. No matter how quickly the government may respond, if those systems and services are not in place to help survivors, then it's very difficult for people not to become more afraid that this defence is going to fuel a system that already works against victims and survivors of sexual and other violence.
Again, my recommendation is to really look at those systems and how they are unevenly distributed throughout the country. If you consider the under-reporting of those crimes versus how many there actually are, and then how funding might be distributed to those services based on reported crimes, I think you might start to get that picture together.