Qujannamiik, MP Idlout, for that, and I thank the translator for the work today.
This board is a partial answer to accountability for the government generally. It responds specifically to calls to action 53 to 56 to make sure that we are being held to account as a government for the 94 calls to action. It's not the perfect mechanism of entire accountability. There are other ones, and you mentioned the rights-based approach that we must take as a government with respect to implementing, not only the 94 calls to action but the calls to justice in the final report on murdered and missing indigenous women and girls.
There are many moving parts across the spectrum of reconciliation-related initiatives that look for the accountability of the federal government in making sure that we're moving in a rights-based process, the foremost of which is still outstanding. It is the action plan into the implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples that will provide a pathway. This will feed into it and, indeed, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples is referred to in the act, but it's not the only instrument. It's a very long-awaited instrument that will be the authority on whether the government is fulfilling its actions, not only our government but other governments at other levels. It's obviously one where we can look at budgetary implementation and policy reforms, if they have those recommendations and choose to do so as well as the annual report on reconciliation that is to be tabled in Parliament according to the law.
It is one of many, but I do want to highlight your main point, which is to keep focusing on a rights-based approach to this and not a transactional approach, which has characterized a number of initiatives across the government.