Oh, taken. Well, if the victims have come from overseas, frequently there are conditions of poverty, but I think we can't ignore the fact that in the situation of women, perhaps women are also escaping gender discrimination or violence in the family. Those are so-called push factors. It's important to recognize the whole of feminization of migration: that women are travelling—moving or migrating—primarily for work purposes; they are sole bread winners for their families. There is also a certain level of acceptance that women are suitable for work in informal sectors that are not regulated and are poorly paid. That alone has put women in a particularly vulnerable situation when, upon arrival, wherever it might be, they go into markets that are unregulated.
For example, in the case of domestic service, they are isolated in individual homes. While the primary purpose for their migration for work was to provide domestic service in individuals' homes, it leaves them vulnerable too—and isolated—to violence that could take place in such environments.