Yes, and because I will do them, I get a bit longer.
As for the international aspects, I want to point out that recently the Dutch police closed down half of the red light district in Amsterdam, due to the involvement of organized crime. That tells us exactly what legalization does, as to attracting organized networks.
When we started to work in Russia, the Baltic countries, and in Nepal, there were propositions to legalize the prostitution industry in all these five countries. They have all now chosen to go the other way and focus on preventative measures: on the social, economic, and legal position of women, and so on; on criminalizing the buyers; and on putting a lot of emphasis into working against the organized networks.
Nepal is a case in point. I spent a lot of time in Nepal, a country with armed conflicts that just ended, where women were sold over the border to India, and where local prostitution and the trafficking of women internally was quite developed because of the armed conflict. Yet the new government made the decision to put into place a national rapporteur. They will criminalize the buyers in the new legal proposal, and they will expand the possibilities of a national action plan.
So in Canada, it's necessary to have an independent national rapporteur to dig into and get more information about the situation here, because now the information is so scattered and has not been gathered, and nobody has a clue about what's going on in different provinces.