Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm listening to the discussion, and I'm sympathetic to both sides of it insofar as I think we do need to look at amendments that create an obligation for the government to provide information to humanitarian organizations either by publishing that information publicly or at least by making that information available to those organizations in some way so that they're not guessing about what areas or what organizations and they can have some good, reasonable guidance around that.
My view of NDP-2 is that it makes changes to our terrorist-financing framework that go substantially beyond just the issue of humanitarian organizations. My reading of it is that it, in fact, changes our terrorist-financing framework such that you can only be charged with terrorist-financing offences if you are financing a listed entity, which is a change from the current law, where you could be charged for financing a terrorist group that's not a terrorist entity.
I see some of the officials nodding, which suggests that maybe I'm on the right track here.
We're not just talking about humanitarian organizations. We're talking about this: If a new organization that the Government of Canada is not aware of emerges on the scene and is involved in explicitly terrorist activity, and somebody in Canada is intentionally organizing fundraisers for that organization, they cannot be convicted of terrorist-financing offences if that organization is not yet listed.
My concern is just that we should try to limit the impacts of our amendments on terrorist-financing laws today to apply to the things that are necessary to enable humanitarian organizations to do their work, and not do things in the context of this bill that are going to make broader, more dramatic reforms to terrorist-financing law.
There may be an argument for saying that the government should list every terrorist organization, that it shouldn't be convicting people for terrorist financing if they're funding groups that are not listed and that the government should do the work of listing. I don't personally agree with that argument. I think maybe there's an argument to be made, and that's an issue that can be studied. However, I would just say that we limit our deliberations.... My suggestion would be to have this bill deal, as precisely as possible, with the circumstances of humanitarian organizations.
On that basis, I agree with some aspects of the intention. I don't support NDP-2, but I think we do need to look at later amendments that would create obligations for the government to provide information to development organizations that would help them do their work.