I'm going to go to the recommendations that we wrote.
Address the systemic barriers that make women and girls with disabilities and other groups more vulnerable to trafficking: isolation, social exclusion, discrimination, low income, poverty, housing precarity and inadequate access to support services.
Dismantle laws that perpetuate discriminatory law enforcement practices with Black, indigenous and other racial groups.
Establish funding and partnership mechanisms that strengthen community capacity and connect and sustain allies in their collective work to recognize, prevent and address gender-based violence and trafficking.
Integrate an intersectional approach to provincial, territorial and federal inquiries. Of course, a national action plan is a perfect opportunity for us to really work on this with our provincial and territorial partners.
Explicitly name women, girls and gender-diverse people with disabilities, especially those living with intellectual, invisible or mental health conditions as well as those who are racialized or indigenous, as facing a higher risk of trafficking in human trafficking policies.
Collect disaggregated data.
Centre disability and trafficking responsiveness in public education, as many survivors become disabled because of trafficking, and their disability makes them targets to be trafficked.
Commit to an anti-racist, anti-colonial and anti-ableist framework and to meaningful participation of the disability community of civil society working with diverse women and girls with disabilities and our partners.
Connect funding to appropriate, accessible, inclusive, affirming and culturally sensitive trauma-informed supports for survivors of GBV.
Of course, based on what I talked about at the very beginning in terms of the case I discussed, we're not always talking about trafficking for the reasons many other women are trafficked. In the case of women and girls with disabilities who are vulnerable, this is simply somebody taking advantage of an individual, perpetuating that and repeating it. The idea is that, as I said, it starts at childhood and is repeated and repeated.
Again, we have two Supreme Court cases. That is not because there are only two cases but because those are the only two cases that made it to the courts.
Thank you so much, Anita. I really appreciate your giving me some time on the floor.