What I was referring to on that isn't so much on a money-laundering threat, and I don't have specific evidence related to Canada that North Korea has used Canadian financial institutions, etc. in that way.
What we have seen in the past few years is North Korea's ability to procure goods and components from Canada that should have been restricted pursuant to Canada's export control legislation. As a good example, the UN mentioned in a report not that long ago that it had discovered that Canadian flight control computers were being used to pilot North Korean drones. That's an example of a way that North Korea has been able to access Canadian technology.
As a disclaimer on that, to be fair, it is partly a result of the sophistication of North Korean evasive behaviour. North Korea is fantastically good at establishing front companies in China and other places around the world, where on paper, if you look one level deep, you will never see that the North Koreans are involved. As a consequence of that, and if a Chinese small or medium-sized enterprise reaches out for some of these goods, it's difficult to know that the end users behind it may be someone else.