Article 25 of the Canadian Charter of the rights and freedoms
The Article 25 of the Canadian Charter of the rights and freedoms is the first article under the heading general Dispositions of the Charte of the rights of the Constitution of Canada; just like the other articles of the General provisions , it helps with the interpretation of the rights present elsewhere in the Charte . Although article 25 is also the article which is worried most directly about the people autochtones, it does not create any constitutional law for them. The rights of the autochtones, including the rights relating to the treaties, are protected constitutionally in a more direct way to article 35 of the constitutional Loi of 1982 .
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25. The fact that the present charter guarantees certain rights and freedoms does not carry not reached to the rights or freedoms — ancestral, resulting from treaties or others — people autochtones of Canada, in particular:
|Article 25 of the Canadian Charter of the rights and freedoms
- a) with the rights or freedoms recognized by the royal proclamation of October 7th, 1763;
- b) with the rights or freedoms existing resulting from agreements on territorial claims or those likely to be thus acquired.
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