Thank you very much.
There is such a wonderful panel with so much information that I wish I could ask you all questions, but I really do want to focus on the financial and economic abuse.
Meseret Haileyesus, I will be directing most of my questions to you. If there is time, I'll go to some of the others.
I know that the Canadian Centre for Women's Empowerment is really avant-garde. It was the first centre in Canada to even get statistics and research about financial or economic abuse.
One thing that you've testified before this committee before—and in this context I think it's very relevant—is that often women who are suffering from financial or economic abuse are not self-aware that this is a form of abuse and that it's happening to them, sometimes until many years later.
I think we've seen this similar thing with coercive control because it's not defined and it's not publicly visible. If someone hits you, you know that's abuse.
With coercive control and financial abuse, how do you get around that, when you have people who are suffering from this who might not even realize it themselves, especially when we're looking at the Criminal Code and looking at formalizing things?