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who claim to be victims of discrimination may file complaints with the appropriate commission.
These complaints are investigated, and there may be a conciliation process. If necessary, a board
of inquiry or human rights tribunal determines the legal merits of the complaint.
26.
The Canadian Criminal Code contains three provisions relating to hate propaganda:
advocation of genocide (sect. 318), public incitement of hatred (sect. 319, para. 1) and wilful
promotion of hatred (sect. 319, para. 2). The provincial human rights statutes also contain
provisions of dealing with discriminatory messages in various forms.
27.
International human rights treaties are not self-executing in Canada. Furthermore, the
different powers between federal and provincial authorities mean that “there may sometimes be
differences in the manner of implementing rights in the various jurisdictions. These differences
may reflect differences in local conditions (ibid, para. 140). Canada asserts that the legal system
safeguards against discrepancies in the level of human rights protection between jurisdictions for
two main reasons: first, that the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms applies across all
jurisdictions and takes precedence where there is any contradiction in federal or provincial
legislation; and, second, that the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Charter is valid across all
jurisdictions. Section 15 (1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms reads: “Every
individual is equal before the and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and
equal benefit of the law, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability”.
28.
Nonetheless, the Special Rapporteur wishes to recall that the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination, has pointed out that the fact that the federal Government
cannot compel the provincial and territorial governments to align their laws with the
requirements of international instruments like the International Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Racial Discrimination ratified by Canada a matter for concern,4
II. PRESENTATION OF THEIR SITUATION BY THE
COMMUNITIES CONCERNED
A. Aboriginal peoples
29.
Treaty rights, and especially the recognition of the land rights of aboriginal peoples,
remain one of the central, symbolic issues for most members of the aboriginal communities. To
date, 0.4 per cent of Canadian territory has been attributed to aboriginal peoples in the form of
reserves. According to the Special Rapporteur’s interviews with aboriginal contacts and to the
documentation supplied, between 1867 and 1923, several Indian Nations signed treaties with the
Canadian authorities, according to which they were willing to share their land with
non-aboriginals, but without giving up their independence.5 Special provisions were added to
the 1982 Constitution Act to deal with the land claims of aboriginal peoples and the need to
reconcile their ancestral rights with the rights of the State and other Canadians. In section 35 (1),
the Constitution Act states that “The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the aboriginal
peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed”. These treaty rights include “rights that
now exist by way of land claims agreements or may be so acquired” (paragraph 3 of the same
section). The aboriginal peoples’ persistent claims led to significant advances from a judicial
point of view, especially with the Supreme Court judgement in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia
(1997), which recognized the uninterrupted existence of the land titles of aboriginal peoples in