Thank you very much.
It seems to me that we're always talking about the effects of horrific crime; we're dealing with the aftermath of something dreadful that has happened to human beings.
I noted in your presentation that you talked about prevention and the question of decriminalization, but there's also a piece in which you talk about international and national economic policies, globalization, of various countries, like Cameroon, Cambodia, and Myanmar--Burma--which we know has the worst human rights record in the world.
I wonder if you can draw a correlation between the kinds of global and trade treaties that places like Canada has with these countries and prevention. What should we be doing in terms of our acceptance of cheap labour, cheap goods, in places like Wal-Mart and stores around the country, that come from these countries, to change that economic paradigm in favour of helping people so that they don't end up victims, so that they don't end up being economically deprived and in brothels?