Thank you for your question.
Just to clarify one point, we absolutely are a significant point in the process. Bringing refugees into Canada is not something that we've necessarily lost control of. It's not necessarily an issue, but it's something I'm not speaking to today.
Regarding the specific question you asked, though, yes, there are refugees from new countries of origin who are arriving in Canada. There are continually evolving migration patterns, both regular and irregular, through official and unofficial channels and processes, whether those be smuggling or, in certain circumstances, trafficking.
Our intelligence reporting is exactly the way the agency adjusts and continues to modify our approach regarding specific countries of origin. There are a lot of different changing and evolving migration patterns, day to day and month to month, and in many cases they're subject to the events or the geopolitical situations abroad, as well as to the changing legislation of some of our partner nations, certainly within North America and in Central and South America.
Intelligence reporting allows us to continue to assess what percentages and proportions of these arriving populations are potentially victims, users of human smuggling networks and chains, and what types of organized crime groups are supporting these processes, but also which nations are potentially presenting more frequently as the ones producing victims of human trafficking. That is exactly how the agency is focused and continually evolving with respect to the threat.