I think one thing that Canada could do is to work on radicalization by preventing these young people from being seduced, because we're talking about true seduction from this Islamic anti-imperialist front.
On terrorist financing, I must stress that there is a big difference between money laundering and terrorist financing. Money laundering is always done with illegal funds. Terrorist financing is sometimes done with legitimate funds. Often the funds become dirty or illegitimate only when they are used to carry out a terrorist attack. The key issue we must address is how to deal with money that is earned legitimately and then sent somewhere and then used for terrorist financing or for carrying out an attack.
I did a calculation before 9/11 and the amount of legitimate funds within the total terror economy was about one third. We're talking about large sums.
In reference to Canada, the money that is sent by the diaspora, such as the Iraqi diaspora in Canada or the Somali diaspora, is money that is clean. It is earned legitimately by people. But when it gets there, part of this money is used for terrorist activity. That is an area that requires a lot of research to find the legal framework within which we can legally block these kinds of funds.