There are permanent tools that can't be described if we are outside the system, including the famous federal/provincial/territorial committee. Really, at present, the permanence, or ongoing oversight of Canada's international obligations is handled by an institution made up of the human rights commissions, which serve as a relay to the respective provincial justice ministries. It is an extremely opaque mechanism, and is based on a particular understanding of human rights. That understanding is that governments are accountable only to their own legislatures and not to civil society. There is a basis for this opaqueness. The idea of the conference—and many of us share the idea that this kind of federal/provincial/territorial conference is needed—is to share a new leadership, but also a new hypothesis, that human rights in Canada are not the exclusive property of expert institutional agencies. Ultimately, they themselves are subject to the political judgment of parliaments and legislatures, because, and we are well aware of how this operates, the provincial portion of a Canadian report is always approved first by the minister responsible. The entire process is conducted—it is not quite accurate to say in the most complete secrecy, but certainly not in the most complete spirit of sharing—in that no information is conveyed to civil society.
The idea of the conference is to find a new commitment and a statement of a principle of openness, that is, that human rights are not entirely a matter of international relations like other subjects are. It is the central nervous system of the international community, and as a result, the leadership has to promote openness in the dialogue. These are not a few minor issues in international relations. Human rights belong to people. Parliamentarians, sovereign as they may be, are not the only ones who have human rights; people do.