In the case of the ILO, we have a number of projects that focus on the trafficking of children. This is happening partly because of the interest of the donors but also because it's part of the reality in a number of countries.
We've lately been concerned with, and have been focusing on, domestic workers. When we started doing projects on domestic workers years back, we were concerned mainly about the problems of age minimums and of kids being able to fit into transition programs that could gradually get them away from work and to school. Now we're getting more concerned with the problem of children and adolescents in domestic work being actually abused, as my colleague was just mentioning.
At the ILO we're also very much concerned--this is related to the previous question, which I can now answer--about restrictive visas. In some conditions, these restrictions, compared with other countries, can be a promoting factor for forced labour, for some type of forced labour. Forced labour is really a question of working in freedom versus not working in freedom--workers being restricted, being coerced or afraid. That is the element of forced labour, whether it's for one kind of activity or another.