Thank you, Madam Chair.
If I could, I'd like to add to that. I think Ms. Minna was on the right track here in terms of trying to keep this focused by keeping it in the Canadian environment. There is no doubt that even at the Canadian level it's still a broad dimension, it still affects and reaches into areas of our economy that are beyond just the sexual exploitation side, but by keeping it here we're naturally then going to be forced to look at what remedies, what tools, we could use legislatively. Ultimately, we want to come up with some kind of response.
With this having such a global dimension, this phenomenon, much of that is out of our purview. Keeping it focused on sexual exploitation is the right thing to do, but I think the report should mention, because we've had good witness testimony that speaks to the broader aspects of this, how it reaches beyond that. But everything I've heard to date suggests that 90% of what we're seeing in human trafficking arises out of the sexual exploitation, in particular women and children, and that's where the lion's share of this is at. I must say, to go on, that is the most devastating aspect of this phenomenon to our society from a social point of view, and that's where our focus should be--in the Canadian context.