I think it's important to re-emphasize that point. When we say that our rights are inherent or pre-existing, it means that no one has given us those rights, that we possess them as indigenous people and indigenous peoples.
What this bill does is recognize and affirm that very essential and fundamental fact that all of these 46 rights that UNDRIP enshrines are inherent and pre-existing. That is the very reason why courts have been using the UN declaration to interpret aboriginal rights here and abroad. There are specific countries that were mentioned. In Colombia, Guatemala and Belize, courts have interpreted indigenous rights in those countries based on what the content of the UN declaration was, yet these countries do not have Bill C-15 legislation which confirms that UNDRIP has application in their national law.
I think that is the important aspect of the law in this discussion. That includes, of course, the right to self-determination and the right to free, prior and informed consent. These are human rights. We're in 2021, and I think it's grand time that all politicians, all members of Parliament, stand up, recognize and uphold those human rights of indigenous peoples, of the first peoples in this country.