Thank you. That's a good point. That's why the safeguards in the bill and in the existing law are so important. Even under the existing law, it is a crime to attend a training camp if the purpose of attending a training camp is to facilitate the capacity of a terrorist group.
It's not an offence to go to a survival camp in Colorado or a survival camp in the Middle East. It's not an offence to go somewhere to learn how to shoot an AK-47. However, if the person is going to learn how to shoot an AK-47 for the express purpose of helping improve the capacity of a terrorist group, that makes it an offence. That's why the offences are actually worded that way. You have to prove that the purpose of receiving training is to enhance the capacity of a terrorist group. It's not just simply that you want to learn how to shoot an AK-47 or you want to be able to have survival skills.
Those are built into the definition of the offences, but that's why the offences also require the consent of the Attorney General before charges are laid. It's not simply a police officer who makes the determination; you have to get the consent of the Attorney General to say that the prosecution or an arrest would be appropriate.