Mr. Naqvi, I think that question is a very important one in the sense that the Government of Canada and the security and intelligence apparatus for which we're responsible are very much focused on what lessons can be learned from this particular circumstance.
When the director, the deputy minister and I had a discussion about it last week, it struck me that if six years ago, CSIS decided to talk to governmental partners that run vulnerable institutions like the national microbiology lab—or pick your other particularly sensitive federal institution.... CSIS meets with them and gives them a threat assessment briefing or identifies potential threat vectors. The organization itself then looks at their particular personnel and particular circumstances and comes to the conclusion that there may be a vulnerability in a particular case. CSIS then works with that federal partner in detail to get the information necessary for them to make, in their judgment, the appropriate decisions. As I said, I believe there's an RCMP investigation with respect to this that's still ongoing.
In many ways, Mr. Naqvi, this is a good example of where federal security partners, like the RCMP, CSIS and border services—pick your particular security partner—should work with federal partners to help them understand this risk and help them manage what is necessary to ensure that the risk is contained or mitigated in the case that it turns out to be a real risk.
That's one of the reasons the director, my cabinet colleagues and I have been talking about potentially putting before Parliament amendments to the CSIS Act. One of the real limitations now is that when the director wants to talk to people outside the family of federal institutions, governmental institutions, he's very limited by law as to what he can say.
The threat doesn't only exist in federal institutions. It may be in provincial institutions or non-governmental research institutions. I think there's a conversation we can have about how we use some of the skill and experience at CSIS to share, in the appropriate way, with other vulnerable institutions, because we all have, I would hope, the same objective of limiting the risk to our nation's security from incidents like this particular one in Winnipeg.