Let's get started, and thanks again, Madam Minister.
Just for the benefit of the Conservatives, it's spelled out in the treaty here very clearly that there is a loss of Canadian sovereignty. What amazes all of us is that while Canada negotiated an opportunity for NAFO and the European Union to manage inside our waters, it never dawned on anybody to actually ask--for Canada to ask--for the ability to manage outside of the 200-mile limit. That's not in here.
Madam Minister, you said that Bob Applebaum is not a lawyer, that these bureaucrats don't have any knowledge of international law issues. Bob Applebaum is an internationally renowned lawyer with expertise in the Law of the Sea. I point that out to you, so perhaps you should pay more attention to him, because he is a lawyer and you respect and like lawyers.
With respect to the objection procedure, you said that's gone. You made the statement that that's no more. Well, Madam Minister, half of this document describes in detail how countries can still impose the objection procedure. Half of the articles in this document actually describe in detail how the right to unilaterally fish once an objection is filed still exists.
Half of this document outlines in detail that the objection procedure, the matter of resolving the objection procedure, will take up to four years. In fact, your colleagues around you will describe the circumstance surrounding the Gulf of Maine resolution, which DFO and the Government of Canada embarked upon, which took three years to resolve.
There is nothing in this treaty that produces a binding decision within the calendar year, the fishing season, in which an objection is raised. It takes six months to fish down this quota to nothing. That's the problem with this particular revised convention, and you can't deny it. The objection procedure is still here, and countries have the ability to fish unilaterally for as much as they want, right down to the last fish.