Thank you very much.
[Witness spoke in Cree]
[English]
First of all, greetings in Cree, and I express my thanks for the opportunity to be here.
To go directly to your question, I want to, first of all, express my thanks to my leaders for allowing me to be here to support them on questions like that. I worked on the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which was finally adopted, without qualifications, after 39 years on the journey. Those four decades...actually, on behalf of my nation, Maskwacîs, as we say in Cree for Ermineskin. You all know, I think, that Canada, after 27 years of debate, voted against the declaration, and then took 12 more years after that to actually come to supporting it. During that intervening time, of course, I heard many states argue against and for the declaration.
Subsequent to that, there's the Organization of American States' declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples. The OAS declaration actually improves on the UN declaration, and going forward we need to look at both declarations. To go to Mr. Shields' question as well, I'm really happy that article 19 is in the bill. In its preamble.... Article 19 actually goes beyond consultation. Article 19, of course, instructs us, before legislation is adopted, that you seek to obtain the free, prior and informed consent of indigenous peoples, so it's beyond consultation. The OAS declaration supports that and, in fact, goes beyond that. For example, in treaty, it requires us to look at, as the Supreme Court of Canada also said, how do indigenous peoples understand the treaty right to water? How do they express their consent in safeguarding fresh drinking water? How do they then come to engage the spiritual elements of treaty? Those are all now in the OAS declaration.
I applaud the members engaged. I'm going to take a second, please, to applaud you for coming to the Permanent Forum this year in New York, the whole committee. I was really encouraged by the committee's appearance there, because it shows your serious intent to assist us in advancing towards reconciliation.
To answer your question directly, the question about the UN declaration, yes, it's great that article 19 is there, but there are other subsequent, very relevant articles of the UN declaration that, if incorporated into the bill, would strengthen the bill—not only strengthen the bill, but encourage us to support the bill. Right now it's short, and I've been critical about that right from the outset, from the perspective of the treaty lens and of the UN declaration lens. Let's include those articles that will improve the bill, and then we can get to a point, going forward, to advance reconciliation.