Well, in that case, I'll continue my question on traditional medicines.
When traditional medicine is considered for the purposes of ensuring that indigenous people have access to these products, there's also the fear that these health products could be appropriated by non-indigenous people to exploit our traditional understanding and our way of using these medicines in a sacred and reciprocal way.
There are huge concerns with the regulation of how we post these on the public market. Indigenous people do not want to see non-indigenous people harvesting these and then creating exclusive zones, where these products can be put on the market for purchase.
Indigenous traditional medicine needs to continue to be excepted, and needs to continue to be unregulated in the sense that indigenous people have been regulating it in a way that is traditional to our own understanding and ways moving forward.
I would like to have some clarity. I know we probably won't have enough time here, but how can we protect that, and how is this law, that we're debating in relation to the principle of 2014, related to this?