I will just keep on the theme. You asked generally about how we try to incorporate honour of the crown into government dealings. As Charles said, it is an overall federal government responsibility, not just that of Indian Affairs.
With respect to honour of the crown, my personal feeling is that a lot of times it just makes good business sense. Sticking with the theme of implementation, if you're doing good in terms of implementation, then you're more likely to have better relationships that can extend to other areas and so on.
Yes, there has been an Auditor General's report. The Land Claims Commission has been critical of Canada in terms of the way we implement. As Charles said, a lot of that has to do with misunderstanding, having different interpretations of what the obligations are for Canada, for the aboriginal group, and for provincial or territorial governments.
As we are getting more and more agreements, we are beginning to become better able to systematize. I think we are continuously trying to improve. One of the areas that I think needs improvement is sometimes there might be agreement that almost everything has been implemented except for a couple of issues, but it is hard to deal once and for all with those issues to get them resolved.
