INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF INDIGENOUS SOVEREIGNS
Aboriginal Republic of North America


CONSTITUTION


















Aboriginal Thamaniya
The Most Ancient Cosmological Doctrine



The Constitution & Natural Law Principles for  Aboriginal & Indigenous
Peoples of the Aboriginal Republic of North America



© International Society of Indigenous Sovereigns




ABORIGINAL REPUBLIC OF NORTH AMERICA

CONSTITUTION








The Constitution & Natural Law Principles for the
ABORIGINAL REPUBLIC OF NORTH AMERICA




© Aboriginal Republic of North America




Contents:

PREAMBLE

Unit 1
Description of Government and Rights of the Aboriginals as the source of civil power
Unit 2
General Description of 12 Council Government
Unit 3
Aboriginal Republic and Aboriginal Chief
Unit 4
Organization of Parliament
Unit 5
Powers of Parliament
Unit 6
Exercise of the Legislative Power
Unit 7
The Chief Executive
Unit 8
The Branches Relations Between the Chief and the Parliament
Unit 9
Relations Between Parliament and the Chief Executive
Unit 10
The Aboriginal High Court
Unit 11
Revising the Constitution
Unit 12
Affirmation of Office
Unit 13
Covenant of the Community Moral Conduct Laws




PREAMBLE



We the people of the Aboriginal Republic of North America, asserting our Natural Aboriginal Rights as the oldest recorded Aboriginal  Indigenous peoples of the Americas, consisting of an Aboriginal Union of Indigenous Peoples living in accord with Natural Law [The Law of Our Ancestors]  do hereby recognize all Nationals of the Aboriginal Republic of North America as Unified Community, establish our Divine Right to self-rule, a common defense of our Nation, a complete unified will for progress and prosperity by and  for Our People,  establishing justice by way of natural law and equality, and complete autonomy as a Nation.








NATIONALS STATUS

All peoples of North America who are Indigenous-Aboriginal Peoples can be official Nationals of the Aboriginal Republic of North America
Official acceptance in the Aboriginal Republic of North America of an Aboriginal or Tribal Government is based upon acceptance of Constitution of the  Aboriginal Republic of North America


Unit 1 Description of Government and Rights of the Aboriginals as the source of civil power
The Aboriginal Republic of North America
Governing Ministerial Councils

The Aboriginal Republic of North America consists of 12 Ministerial Governing Ministerial Councils that service all aspects of governance for ‘A.R.N.A.’.

12 Ministerial Councils
Executive Ministry- CEM of International Association
Ministry of New Age Technology and Science
Ministry of Cosmology –Spirituality
Ministry of Defense & Intelligence
Ministry of Economics and Engineering
Ministry of International Affairs and Communications
Ministry of Family and Community Action
Ministry of Arts and Culture
Ministry of Health
Ministry of Jural Societies
Ministry of Births, Deaths and Forensics
Ministry of Education and Philosophy











GENERAL DESCRIPTION of 12 Council Government

A.R.N.A. Chief Executive Advisory Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on the Power of the Aborigines who comprise any government to address the needs of the people and implement the political goals of the people through strategic planning and organizing while having a foundational knowledge of civics and government

A.R.N.A. Ministerial Council of New Age Science and Technology –
Concentrating on the many progressive and available scientific and technological tools available to the Aboriginal Indigenous people that can be used to enhance the goals and agendas of the peoples of the Aboriginal Republic of North America and promoting innovative creativity in technology and maAboriginal Chief-King information about innovative scientific achievements and technologies readily available to those nationals who desire them through a natural and environmentally friendly manner

A.R.N.A. Ministerial Council of Religion and Spirituality –
Concentrating on the unified purpose of Religion and Spirituality amongst Aboriginal Indigenous peoples which provides a unified concept of peace and respect for diversity, being aware of the right to lawful responsible choice of any peoples in respect to religion or spirituality, this Ministerial Council has the general and specific duty to discuss and promote harmony in respect to religion and spirituality.

A.R.N.A. Defense and Military Studies Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on the just use of militaries within the Aboriginal Republic of North America with the exclusive intent and purpose to protect the sovereignty of the Aboriginal Indigenous Peoples.

A.R.N.A. Economic Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on the economic condition and activities of the economy of the Indigenous peoples in the nations of the International Community while providing in depth up to date general and specific information to the peoples of the planet about economic policies, plans, and infrastructures and the general maintenance of the economic infrastructure of A.R.N.A..

A.R.N.A. International Affairs and Communications Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on increasing the awareness of the common people to International affairs of Indigenous Peoples of importance to them with focus on the state of the International Indigenous Autonomy and the United Nations and other International Organizations and entities. KEY FOCUS- how the Aboriginal people can use these International bodies to meet their needs, goals, and political aspirations globally

A.R.N.A. Community Action Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on creating associations of A.R.N.A. on local jurisdictions throughout the planet while implementing the common and basic objectives of the Indigenous people of various nationalities based on their immediate needs, goals, and family/community objectives

A.R.N.A. Arts & Culture Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on the sharing of the unique artistic gifts of various peoples and nationalities while creating a renaissance in cultural sharing of various nationalities and implementing the political power of world wide Artistic expression in various cultures with a focus on the contributions of Aboriginal People to Art.

A.R.N.A. Health Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on implementing awareness of the innovative methods available in treatments for disease, increased knowledge of alternative food supplies that can decrease famine/ starvation, and assisting with proper respect for the healing modes of Aboriginal Peoples and the right of the common people to be informed about effective affordable  healing modalities, while teaching them their natural right to decide the best course to take to preserve the health of their families, communities, and nation

A.R.N.A. Justice Ministerial Council –
Concentrating on the proper administration of justice to Aboriginal Peoples of A.R.N.A. and generally all peoples across the planet through awareness of International, National, and local rights available to various nationalities of peoples who are in need of legal and lawful remedy. Politicizing any nation State – or National or National of a nation who disrespects the International agreements made for the protection of the Indigenous peoples of A.R.N.A. any other Indigenous jurisdiction and of the various nations of the earth. Focusing on conflict resolution training to communities of the world so that the power of the people to properly and peacefully handle disputes is given due consideration.

A.R.N.A. Forensics Ministerial Council & Ministerial Council Administering Births and Deaths – Concentrating on the proper administration of properly recording the births and deaths of Aboriginal Nationals of A.R.N.A. with a focus on the Aboriginal Indigenous Cultural practices in birth and death ceremonies and in assisting with forensics in any necessary situation within the A.R.N.A. jurisdiction, and any other jurisdiction by contract

A.R.N.A. Ministerial Council Education & Philosophy –
Concentrating on the education of A.R.N.A. Nationals by and through Our Aboriginal Curriculum while creating world wide respect for diversity in education through discussion, dialogue and scholastic philosophical presentation. To Politicize ANY and ALL attempts at subjecting the people to restrictive unlawful autocratic Corporate or Governmental monopolies on education, whether covert or overt, that is against the direct will of the Aboriginal people who may be involved in such actions


Declaration & Affidavit of Rights
of All Aboriginal Indigenous Peoples

1)All Aboriginal Indigenous Peoples are described as the peoples who are autochthons the natural people of the planet earth
2)The constitution of the Aboriginal Republic of North America contains the general operational principles of the Nation. The society cannot prohibit its Nationals who are Nationals by Natural Right in carrying on any activity that is for the purpose of sustaining the freedom, justice, equality and general sustenance of the single living being or group, however the activity of any living being or group of living beings must not create injury to any other living being or group of living beings or violate natural law.
3)All Aboriginal Indigenous Peoples are born with their nationality by bloodline descent. This cannot be taken from them by the Aboriginal Republic of North America. A.R.N.A. can only assist living beings in properly engaging in their National Plebiscite and offer Nationality upon the agreement of the living being to follow the Constitution, General Moral Code and the Ancient Texts of Aboriginals as translated by A.R.N.A. Research Institute only.
4)The Ministerial Councils and Ministries set up by the people of the Aboriginal Republic of North America represent the Indigenous people by the permission of the Indigenous peoples of the Nation. The government is the people.
5)The Aboriginal Republic of North America does not promote a specific religion but does promote Universal Natural Law based on the Ancient Principles of Cosmology, the laws of Nature, and the laws of absolute character in the universe. We place full confidence in our Collective to arrive at truth through the Laws of the Nation, investigation, and full participation of the people of the Nation.













Unit 2 General Provision and Basic Principles
Article 1: The Aboriginal Republic of North America shall have a constitutional republic and traditionally Aboriginal constitutional Kingdom.
Article 2: Sovereignty shall be that of the Aboriginal People who shall exercise it directly, by means of referendum, or indirectly, through the constitutional representatives who shall be lawfully elected by the people who retain the right to remove those elected officers.
Article 3: Political parties shall participate in the organization and representation of the Nationals. There shall be no one-party system.
Article 4: The law shall be the supreme expression of the will of the Nation of Aboriginal Peoples. All shall abide by it. The law shall have no retroactive effect.
Article 5: All Aboriginal nationals of the Aboriginal Republic of North America shall be equal before the law.
Article 6: Aboriginal Natural law as expressed by the natural law system of the Constitution and all laws in pursuance thereof shall be the official state natural law system. The state shall guarantee freedom of worship for all.
Article 7: The flag of the Republic and the Aboriginal Chief-Kingdom shall be a black flag with a white star and crescent along with the international flag (I.S.I.S. Flag) which shall be an all red flag. The motto of the Aboriginal Republic shall be: One Nationality One Aim One Destiny.
Article 8: Aboriginal Men and Aboriginal women shall enjoy equal natural and political rights. Any National of age enjoying his or her civil and political rights shall be eligible to elect officers to positions of government.
Article 9: The constitution shall guarantee all Aboriginal Nationals the following:
a.freedom of movement through, and of settlement in, all parts of the Aboriginal Republic;
b.freedom of opinion, of expression in all its forms, and of public gathering;
c.freedom of association, and the freedom to belong to any union or political group of their choice.
No limitation, except by law as the expressed will of the Aboriginal People, shall be put to the exercise of such freedoms.
Article 10: No one shall be arrested, put into custody or penalized except under the circumstances and procedures prescribed by natural law. The home shall be inviolable. Search warrant shall be issued and investigation ordered under the conditions and procedures prescribed by natural law.
Article 11: Privacy shall be preserved as a natural right.
Article 12: Opportunities for labor in official representative governmental capacity shall be uniformly open to all Aboriginal Nationals.
Article 13: All Aboriginal Nationals shall have equal rights in seeking education and labor.
Article 14: The natural right to self defense shall be a guaranteed natural right as well as the natural right to a trial by jury upon being charged with civil or criminal offenses.
Article 15: The right of private property and free enterprise shall be guaranteed to all Aboriginal Nationals.
Article 16: All Aboriginal Nationals shall contribute to the defense and economic sovereignty of the Nation.
Article 17: All Aboriginal Nationals shall, according to their contributory power, bear governmental costs which shall be enacted and allocated only by the law, and in the manner stipulated in the provisions of the present Constitution.
Article 18: All shall, in solidarity, bear the costs resulting from disasters and attacks upon the civil and military power and sovereignty suffered by the Nation.
Unit 3 Aboriginal Republic & Aboriginal Chief
Article 19: The Aboriginal Chief, shall be the Supreme Representative of the Nation and the Symbol of the unity thereof. He shall be the guarantor of the perpetuation and the continuity of the State. He shall ensure the respect for the Constitution and natural law. He shall be the Protector of the rights and liberties of the Aboriginal Nationals, social groups and organizations. Along with the Civil power which rests directly with the Aboriginal Peoples, The Aboriginal Chief shall also be the guarantor of the independence of the Nation and the territorial integrity of the Aboriginal Republic within all its rightful boundaries.
Article 20: The Aboriginal Republic of North American seat of Aboriginal Chief and the constitutional rights thereof shall be heriditary and handed down, from father to son, to descendants in direct male line and by order of primogeniture among the offspring of the Aboriginal Chief, unless the Aboriginal Chief should, during his lifetime, designate a successor among his sons apart from the eldest one. In case of failing descendants in direct male line, the right of succession to the seat of Aboriginal Chief shall, under the same conditions, be invested in the Jural Society who shall appoint an Aboriginal Chief. The Aboriginal Chief may only be removed by the Aboriginal High Court for acts of sedition and treason against the sovereignty of the Nation which rests in the people, upon which time the two Houses will select a temporary Aboriginal Chief until elections are held within a 120 day period.
Article 21: The Aboriginal Chief shall be considered minor until he turns sixteen. During the Aboriginal Chief's phase of minority, The Jural Society shall assume the powers of the constitutional rights of the Crown, with the exceptions of those pertaining to the revision of this Constitution. The Jural Society shall serve as an advisory board to the Aboriginal Chief until he turns twenty. The Jural Society shall be presided over by the First President of the Supreme Court. It shall include eight (8) Aboriginal Jurists appointed by Aboriginal Chief's own accord. Rules of procedure of the Jural Society shall be governed by the organic natural law system of the Aboriginal Republic of North America.
Article 22: The Aboriginal Chief shall appoint the Prime Minister. Upon the Prime Minister's recommendation, the Aboriginal Chief shall appoint the other 4 Cabinet members. The Aboriginal Chief may terminate their services upon proper public decree. The Aboriginal Chief shall terminate the services of the Chief Executive representatives either on his own initiative or because of their resignation.
Article 25: The Aboriginal Chief shall preside over Cabinet meetings.
Article 26: The Aboriginal Chief shall promulgate a definitively adopted law within the thirty days following its receipt by the Government.
Article 27: The Aboriginal Chief may temporarily dissolve the two Houses (Jural Society and Ministerial Congress) or one thereof by Executive Decree if those bodies are found to be in violation of this Constitution or upon their violations of the natural rights of the natural rights of the Aboriginal Nationals and or through acts of sedition or treason. The High Court shall hold Trial within 30 days on the matter and deliver its opinion within 30 days.
Article 28: The Aboriginal Chief shall have the right to deliver addresses to the Nation and to the two houses of Parliament. The messages shall be read out before both Houses.
Article 29: The Aboriginal Chief shall, by Executive Decrees, exercise the statutory powers explicitly conferred upon him by the Constitution. Executive Decrees shall be countersigned by the Prime Minister .
Article 30: The Aboriginal Chief shall be the Commander-in-chief of the Aboriginal Guard. He shall make civil and military appointments and shall reserve the right to delegate such a power.
Article 31: The Aboriginal Chief shall accredit ambassadors to foreign nations and international organizations. Ambassadors or representatives of international organizations shall be accredited to him. The Aboriginal Chief shall sign and ratify treaties. However, treaties committing State finances shall not be ratified without having been approved under the law and implemented in statutes of the nation. Treaties likely to affect the constitutional provisions shall be approved in accordance with the consent of the Jural Society.
Article 32: The Aboriginal Chief shall have full participation in the affairs and determinations of the Jural Society, the Ministerial Council of Education and the Ministerial Council for Economics and Engineering.
Article 33: The Aboriginal Chief shall appoint aboriginal jurists in accordance with the conditions prescribed in this Constitution.
Article 34: The Aboriginal Chief shall exercise the right of granting executive pardon.
Article 35: Should the integrity of the national territory ever be under threat or should any event interrupt the course of action of the constitutional institutions, the Aboriginal Chief shall, after consulting with the President of the Ministerial Congress and the president of the Jural Society, and addressing the Nation, have the right to declare a State of Emergency by Executive Decree. Notwithstanding all contrary provisions, he shall hence assume the responsibility of making decisions to protect the sovereignty of the Nation. The Officials of government whether tribal (local), provincial, regional, or national shall provide the Aboriginal Chief with all the necessary means and measures for the nations defense and the restoration of a normal functioning of constitutional institutions and State affairs. The State of Emergency shall not entail the dissolution of the Ministerial Congress. The State of Emergency shall be terminated according to the same procedure followed in the proclamation thereof.
Unit 4 Organization of Parliament
Article 36: The Parliament shall be made up of two Houses, the Ministerial Congress and the Jural Society. Members of the Houses shall hold their mandate from the Nation. Their right to make elections on decisions shall be personal and cannot be delegated.
Article 37: Members of the Ministerial Congress shall be elected for a four (4)- year term by direct election of the Aboriginal Nationals of the Aboriginal Republic of North America. The legal legislative period shall end at the opening of the September Or 9th month from winter solstice) session in the third year following the election of the House. The number of representatives as well as the election system, eligibility requirements, incompatibility cases, legal contentions concerning elections shall be set out in an a natural law fashion. The President of the Ministerial Congress shall be elected first at the beginning of the legislative period.
Article 38: The Jural Society House officials shall be appointed by the Aboriginal-Chief for four-year periods.
Article 39: No member of Parliament shall be prosecuted, arrested, put into custody or brought to trial as a result of expressing opinions or casting an election while exercising office functions, except when the opinions expressed may be injurious to the monarchical system and the integrity of the Nation. During parliamentary sessions, no member of Parliament shall be subject to prosecution or arrest for criminal charges or felonies, besides those mentioned in the preceding paragraph, without permission from the House or Aboriginal Chief concurrent with law. Outside parliamentary sessions, no member of Parliament shall be subject to arrest without a fair trial.
Article 40: The Parliament shall hold its meetings during two sessions a year. The Aboriginal Chief shall preside over the opening of the first session which shall begin on the second Friday in September (or the 9th month from the winter solstice). The second session shall begin on the second Friday in April (or the 4th month from the winter solstice). When the Parliament convenes for at least three months during one session, the session may be adjourned by decree.
Article 41: The Parliament may be convened in special session either at the request of the absolute majority of the members of one of the two Houses or by decree. Special sessions of the Parliament shall be held on the basis of a defined agenda. Once the agenda fully addressed , the session shall be adjourned by decree.
Article 42: Cabinet members may attend the meetings of each House and those of the committees thereof; they shall, in this respect, have the right to commission their own assistants. Apart from the standing committees referred to in the preceding paragraph, parliamentary fact-finding committees may be established on the Aboriginal Chief's initiative or upon the request of the majority of the members of one of the two Houses and within each House, with the mission of inquiring about specific facts and submitting findings thereon to that House. There shall be no fact-finding committees in cases involving prosecutions, except by the Jural Society, and Ministry of Intelligence & Defense. The mission of any fact-finding committee which may be established shall end with the opening of the judicial investigation pertaining to the instances bringing about the establishment thereof. Fact-finding committees shall by nature be temporary. Their mission shall end with the submission of their reports. The functioning of these committees shall be governed by an natural and organic law.
Article 43: Meetings of the Houses of Parliament shall be open to Aboriginal Nationals. Proceedings of the debates shall be published in Aboriginal Congressional Journals and Aboriginal Jural Society Journals. Each House may hold private meetings if so requested by the Aboriginal Chief, Prime Minister, or by a third of its members.
Article 44: Each House shall establish and elect on its own Rules of Procedure and publishing such for the record. These shall not, however, go into effect until they are declared by the Jural Society as consistent with the provisions of this Constitution.
Unit 5 Powers of Parliament
Article 45: Legislation shall be elected on by Parliament the 9 Ministerial members of Congress and the 9 members of the Jural Society. For a limited period of time, and for a defined purpose, the Government may be empowered by law to take, by decree, measures normally falling within the scope of the law. Decrees shall become effective immediately after the publication thereof; however, they shall be submitted, for ratification, to the Parliament within the time limits set by the empowering law. Should either House be dissolved, such a law shall become void.
Article 46: In addition to jurisdiction matters explicitly assigned in other articles of the Constitution, the Legislative Power shall have competence in the following areas:
a.the individual and collective rights enumerated in Chapter One of the present Constitution;
b.determining offences and the appropriate penalties, the penal and civil procedure and the promulgation of new categories of jurisdiction;
c.the statute of aboriginal jurists;
d.the general statute of governmental representative offices;
e.the fundamental guarantees granted civil and military personnel;
f.the electoral system of local, provincial, and regional assemblies and councils;
g.the regulation of civil and commercial liabilities;
h.the establishment of new governmental agencies;
i.the nationalization of new aboriginal nationals, nationalization of enterprises or the transfer thereof from the public to the private sector.
The Parliament shall be empowered to vote on basic laws pertaining to the fundamental objectives of the activities of the State in economic, social and cultural areas.
Article 47: Matters outside the scope of legislature shall come under executive jurisdiction.
Article 48: Legislated bills may be amended by decree, with the consent of the Constitutional Jural Society and when they fall within the jurisdiction of the authority holding statutory power.
Article 49: A state of martial law may be declared by Royal Decree for a period of thirty days. This duration may be extended by law only.
Article 50: The appropriation of law shall be voted on by the Parliament under conditions prescribed by an organic law. Capital expenditures resulting from development plans shall be elected on only at the time the Parliament approves such plans and shall be approved by the Chief Executive. These expenditures shall automatically be extended throughout the period of the plan. The Government alone shall have the prerogative to submit draft bills aimed at modifying programs thus adopted. If, by the end of the fiscal year , the budget is not elected on or is not promulgated as a result of its submission to the Constitutional Council in accordance with Article 81, the Government shall, by decree and in accordance with the budgetary proposals submitted for approval, be entitled to allocate funds necessary for the operation of the representative governmental services and the exercise of the functions thereof. In such a case, revenues shall be collected in accordance with the legislative and statutory prescriptions in force, except, however, those revenues to be cancelled under the proposed appropriation of law.
Article 51: Proposals and amendments introduced by Members of Parliament shall not be acceptable when the adoption thereof might affect the proposed appropriation of law by causing a decrease in public resources, an increase in a public expenditure or the creation of a new one.
Unit 6 The Exercise of Legislative Power
Article 52: The right to introduce laws shall equally be granted the Prime Minister and Members of Parliament. Draft bills shall be laid on the table of one of the two Houses.
Article 53: The Government may declare the unsuitability of any proposal or amendment considered outside the scope of the legislative power. In case of disagreement, the Chief Executive shall take action within a period of eight days upon request of one of the two Houses or the Government.
Article 54: Draft bills and proposals shall be examined by the acting committees of aboriginal jurists whose work shall continue during the interval between the sessions.
Article 55: During the recess periods, the Chief Executive may, in agreement with the committees concerned, in both Houses, adopt ordinances which shall be submitted, for ratification, during the following regular session of Parliament. The draft bill shall be tabled in one of the two Houses for enacting.
Article 56: The Aboriginal Jurists of each House shall prepare the agenda of the House. Priority shall be given, in the order defined by the Chief Executive, to the discussion of draft bills it introduces and proposed laws accepted by it. One meeting per week shall, by priority, be reserved in each House for the questions of the members of the House and the Chief Executive's responses. The Chief Executive shall give a reply within twenty days after their receipt of the question.
Article 57: Members of each House, as well as the Chief Executive, shall have the right to propose amendments. After the opening of the debates, the Chief Executive may object to the examination of any amendment not submitted, beforehand, to the acting committee concerned. If requested by the Chief Executive, the House in which the text under discussion was tabled shall take action by single vote on the whole or part of the bill under discussion. Only amendments proposed or accepted by the Chief Executive shall be considered.
Article 58: Any draft bill or proposed bill shall be considered successively by the two Houses of Parliament, with a view to adopting an identical text. The House in which the draft bill is tabled first shall examine the text of the draft bill presented by the Chief Executive or the text of the proposed bill on the agenda. A house in which a bill already adopted by the other House is tabled, shall deliberate on the draft referred to it. If a draft bill or a proposed bill cannot be adopted after two readings in each House, or if the Chief Executive proclaims that the matter is urgent after only one reading in each House, the Chief Executive may call a meeting of the joint committee with equal representation which shall propose a draft on the remaining provisions under discussion. The text drafted by the joint committee may be submitted by the Chief Executive to the Houses for adoption. No amendment shall be considered except with the approval of the Chief Executive. If the joint committee has not managed to adopt a joint bill or if the bill has not been adopted or if the bill has not been adopted by the two Houses, the Chief Executive may submit to the Ministerial Congress the draft bill or the proposed bill as modified, if necessary, in the light of amendments reached during parliamentary debates and taken up by the Chief Executive. The Ministerial Congress and Jural Society shall proclaim final adoption of the bill only with the absolute majority of its members. Organic laws shall be adopted and amended under the same conditions. Organic laws pertaining to the Jural Society shall be put to the vote under the same conditions in both Houses. Organic laws shall not be promulgated until the Aboriginal Chief-King and his advisory Council issues a decision on their conformity with the Constitution.
Unit 7 The Chief Executive
Article 59: The Chief Executive shall be composed of the Prime Minister and Ministers with the Aboriginal Chief as the Civil Head of State.
Article 60: The Chief Executive shall be answerable to the Aboriginal People, the Aboriginal Chief and the Parliament. After the appointment of the Cabinet members by the Aboriginal Chief, the Prime Minister shall appear before each one of the two Houses, to submit the agenda to be carried out. Such an agenda shall clearly outline the policy to be adopted by the Chief Executive in various areas of national activity, namely in economic, social, cultural and foreign affairs. This agenda shall come under discussion in each one of the two Houses. At the House of Representatives, it shall be put to the election in accordance with the provisions stipulated in paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 75, and with the implications accounted for in the last paragraph of the same Article.
Article 61: Under the Prime Minister's responsibility, the Chief Executive shall ensure the execution of the laws. All public facilities shall be placed at the Chief Executive’s disposal.
Article 62: The Prime Minister shall have the right to introduce bills. No draft bill shall be tabled, by his Department, in one of the two Houses before it is debated in a Cabinet meeting.
Article 63: The Prime Minister shall exercise the administrative powers. Decrees endorsed by the Prime Minister shall be countersigned by the Ministers responsible for the implementation thereof.
Article 64: The Prime Minister may delegate some of his powers to the Ministers.
Article 65: The Prime Minister shall be responsible for the co-ordination of ministerial activities.
Article 66: The Cabinet shall be notified of the following, before any relevant decision is taken:
a.matters related to general policies of the State;
b.declaration of martial law
c.declaration of war;
d.requesting confidence from the Ministerial Congress to allow the Chief Executive to carry out their responsibilities further;
e.draft bills, before they are brought to one of the two Houses;
f.statutory decrees,
g.draft plan;
h.projects for revising this Constitution
Unit 8 The Branches Relations Between the Aboriginal Chief and Parliament
Article 67: The Aboriginal Chief may request a second reading by the two Houses of any draft bill or proposed law.
Article 68: A second reading shall be requested in a message. Such a new reading shall not be refused.
Article 69: After a second reading, the Aboriginal Chief may, by Executive Decree, submit any draft bill or proposed law to referendum, except in the case of those submitted for a new reading which shall have been adopted or rejected by a two-thirds majority of the members of each one of the two Houses.
Article 70: The results of the referendum shall be binding upon all.
Article 71: After consulting with the Presidents of the two Houses, and specifically the Chairman of the Jural Society and addressing the Nation, the Aboriginal Chief may decree the dissolution of the two Houses or of one of them only.
Article 72: The election of the new Parliament or the new House shall take place, at the latest, three months after such a dissolution. The Aboriginal Chief shall, in the meantime, exercise the powers lying with the Parliament in terms of law making, in addition to those conferred upon him by this Constitution.
Article 73: When a House is dissolved, the one succeeding it shall not be dissolved until a year after its election.
Article 74: The declaration of war shall be announced after notifying both Houses
Unit 9 Relations Between Parliament and the Chief Executive
Article 75: The Prime Minister may engage the responsibility of the Chief Executive before the Ministerial Congress through an election of confidence regarding a statement on a general policy or a proposal requesting the approval thereof. Confidence shall be withdrawn and a bill rejected only by an absolute majority vote of the Members of the Ministerial Congress. The election shall be held three clear days after the matter of the election of confidence has been raised. Withdrawal of confidence shall entail the resignation of the Chief Executive in a body.
Article 76: The Ministerial Congress may put into question the pursuance of the Chief Executive's responsibilities by adopting a censure motion. Such a motion shall be acceptable only if signed by at least one -fourth of the members of the House. The censure motion shall be approved by the Ministerial Congress only by an absolute majority vote of its members. Electing shall take place three clear days only after the motion has been introduced. The election for censure shall entail the resignation of the Chief Executive in a body. Should the Chief Executive be censured by the Ministerial Congress, no other censure motion shall be acceptable before a year has elapsed.
Article 77: The Jural Society may elect warning or censure motions against the Chief Executive. The warning motion must be signed by at least one third of the members of the Jural Society. It shall be elected by the absolute majority of the members of the House. Electing shall take place three clear days after the motion has been introduced. The text of the warning shall be sent forthwith by the President of the Jural Society to the Prime Minister who shall, within six days, present before the Jural Society, the Chief Executive's position concerning the reasons which prompted the warning. The Chief Executive's statement shall be followed by a debate without a election. The censure motion shall not be introduced unless it is signed by at least one third of the members of the Jural Society. It shall be approved only after a vote by a 2/3 majority of the members of the House. Electing shall take place three days after the motion has been introduced. The vote for censure shall entail the joint resignation of the Chief. Should the Chief Executive be censured by the Jural Society, no other censure motion shall be introduced in the Jural Society before a year has elapsed.

Article 78: The Judiciary shall be joined with legislative branch and independent of the executive branch.
Article 79: Sentences shall be passed and executed in the Aboriginal Chiefs name.
Article 80: Upon recommendations made by the Jural Society and Certification program, aboriginal jurists shall be appointed by Executive Decrees.
Article 81: Aboriginal Jurists in the bench shall be irremovable except upon circumstances of violation of an Aboriginal Nationals natural rights or rights in this constitution.
Article 82: The Jural Society shall be presided over by the Aboriginal Chief. It shall further consist of:
a.the President of the Jural Society-Supreme Court;
b.the Prosecutor General in the Supreme Court;
c.Aboriginal Jurists;
Article 83: The Jural Society shall ensure the implementation of the guarantees granted aboriginal jurists regarding their promotion and discipline.
Unit 10 The Aboriginal High Court of Justice
Article 84: Representatives of the Government shall be penally responsible for civil infringements and crimes and felonies they may commit while exercising their functions.
Article 85: They may be indicted by the two Houses of Parliament: and referred to the Aboriginal High Court for trial.
Article 86: They may be charged with Treason by any Aboriginal National upon submission of the charge to the Aboriginal High Court
Article 87: The proposed draft for indictment must be signed by at least a quarter of the members of the House in which it was tabled first. It shall be examined successively by the two Houses and shall be approved only when an identical vote is cast by each House by secret ballot and a two- third majority of its members with the exception of those members called upon to take part in conducting the prosecution and the investigation process and issuing the verdict.
Article 87: The Aboriginal High Court shall consist of equal numbers of members elected from the Houses. All Aboriginal High Court officials must be certified aboriginal jurists. Its President shall be appointed by Executive Decree.
Article 88: An organic natural law shall determine the number of the High Court members, the method of their election and the Rules of Procedure to be adopted.
Unit 11 Revising The Constitution
Article 89: The Aboriginal Chief and the two Houses: shall have the right to initiate a revision of the Constitution. The Aboriginal Chief shall have the right to submit, directly for referundum, the revision project he may initiate.
Article 90: A proposal for revision submitted by one or more members of one of the two Houses shall be adopted only if elected on by a two-thirds majority of the members of the House concerned. The proposal shall be submitted to the other House which may adopt it by a two -thirds majority of its members.
Article 91: Revision projects and proposals shall be submitted to the nation for referendum by Executive Decree. A revision of the Constitution shall be definitive after approval by referendum.
Article 92: Neither the State system of aboriginal chiefdom nor the prescriptions related to the Aboriginal natural law system may be subject to a constitutional revision.
Unit 12 Affirmation of Office
I [Name of Official] contractually obligate myself fully to uphold and implement the duties of the powers delegated to me by the Aboriginal Indigenous Peoples though the Constitution and all laws in pursuance thereof of the Aboriginal Republic of North America

The Opening of Divine Inspiration
1) In the Nature & Power of The Creator, The Master of Spiritual Insight , The Perceiver of All Truth
2) Supreme Devotion  is for  the Originator , Nourisher, and Sustainer of Everything
3) The Master of Spiritual Insight, The Perceiver of All Truth
4) Master of the Period of Judgment
5) We are Servants and We seek Divine Protection
6) By This We are Guided on the Correct Path
7) The Way of those who have Divine Power Bestowed Upon Them
8) Not those whom chastisement is upon them and not of those who are misguided

Unit 13
COVENANT
OF THE
NATIONAL COMMUNITY
The sole purpose of the Aboriginal Republic of North America is the Spiritual, Mental, and Cultural preservation of the life of all Aboriginal Indigenous People within our jurisdiction. All Nationals pledge to support this effort and pledge never to betray this sole purpose. All Nationals who are of conscious and sound mind make a covenant before the Originator of the Universe that they will persevere to uphold moral and divine conduct, that they will work to create, maintain, and sustain a healthy self and family, and that as a National of the Aboriginal Republic of North America they will work to preserve The Unity of the Oldest Aboriginal Indigenous Nations on Earth based on the Culture of these Nations which is the Truth of the Originator of the Heavens and the Earth. We accept all Indigenous Peoples as Nationals who accept the responsibilities as laid out in this Constitution.
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF MORAL CONDUCT
The Aboriginal Republic of North America asks all Nationals to strive to carry the moral conduct needed to establish order and justice for our People. With this in mind we place the 42 declarations of Law (MA'AT ) into this Constitution as a Moral Code for all Nationals. The word Ma'at means Law, that which is right, truth, justice, harmony, and reciprocity. It simply entails the laws that create a moral people, community, and Nation. This is the only true Sovereignty, the making and maintenance of Peace. The 42 Laws of Ma’at were first inscribed by Aboriginals into the Papyrus of Ani in the 18th Dynasty of Ta-Muuray during the rule of our Aboriginal forefathers and foremothers. The Ancient Aboriginals of Ta-Muuray who are spread throughout the Earth are the founders of civilization after the great earth cataclysms. These principles do not conflict with the religious and spiritual rights of any Nationals, group, or community and are placed in this Constitution to create a unified foundation for moral discipline and order.

42 Law declarations
A MORAL Paradigm of Guidance

1.I have not done violence
2.I have not Stolen
3.I have not done unlawful killing nor Harm
4.I have not stolen food
5.I have not swindled Offerings/Donations
6.I have not acted deceitfully
7.I have not told lies
8.I have not wasted food
9.I have not caused anyone or anything unjust pain
10.I have not closed my ears to the truth
11.I have not committed adultery
12.I have not caused anyone grief by way of injustice.
13.I have not committed fornication nor lain with others of my same sex
14.I have not engaged in unlawful degrading speech
15.I have not laid waste to the ploughed land
16.I have not stolen anyone’s land
17.I have not been an eavesdropper/gossiper
18.I have not falsely accused anyone
19.I have not committed a transgression against my own value system
20.I have not seduced anyone’s wife
21.I have not polluted myself
22.I have not terrorized anyone
23.I have not polluted the earth
24.I have not acted without self control
25.I have not cursed the Creator
26.I have not caused unjust grief to others
27.I have not caused Disruption of peace
28.I have not acted hastily or without reason and thought
29.I have not overstepped the  boundaries of my rights
30.I have not unlawfully exaggerated my words when speaking
31.I have not worked injustice
32.I have not used unjust thoughts words nor deeds
33.I have not polluted the water
34.I have not spoken angrily nor arrogantly without purpose
35.I have not unjustly cursed anyone in thoughts, words , and deeds
36.I have not unlawfully placed myself on a pedestal
37.I have not spoken scornfully in an unjust manner
38.I have not stolen from nor disrespected the deceased
39.I have not  unlawfully taken food from a child
40.I have not acted with insolence by way of injustice
41. I have not unjustly slaughtered animals
42. I have not violated natural law


Protocols and Division of the
Aboriginal Republic of North America
National Structure [North America]

Region1-Northeast Region Samal Shariq [Abannaki L’nabi]

Region2 East Region Shariq [Sharakhi]

Southeast Region Hawab Shariq [Yamasih]

Midwest Region Wasat Maghrib [Shakhakhu]

Central Region Wasat [Ia’au]

Southern Region Hawab [Choctaw – Shabtau - Washita]

West/Northwest Region – Maghrib [Hopi - Zuni-Sanay]

Each  of the 8 Regions will be Governed by 5 Regional Ministers
Prime Minister
Secretarial Minister
Intelligence & Defense Minister
Minister for Department of Internal Operations
Regional Chief Minister

The 40 Ministers of the 8 Regions are Governed by the Chief Executive /the Aboriginal Chief-King –
Chief Executive Officer of Civil and Military Command
Supreme Executive Authority/Commander in Chief
Dr. Abdul-Ali Muhammad and Successors