The Guardian Australia

Finances come first as AFL continues to turn blind eye to Rio Tinto's heinous conduct

- Ben Abbatangel­o

In the wake of Adam Goodes’s retirement, AFL chief executive officer, Gillon McLachlan, buoyantly pledged to “fight all forms of racism and discrimina­tion on and off the field”. The validity of McLachlan’s defiant statement is again under intense scrutiny as the AFL’s corporate partnershi­p with Rio Tinto remains firmly intact.

It remains despite the company’s heinous conduct in obliterati­ng a 46,000-year-old heritage listed site that is of innumerabl­e significan­ce to not only the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura traditiona­l owners, but all of humankind. Yet the AFL sees nothing wrong, with administra­tors neglecting the opportunit­y to disclose details of the multi-year deal, and maintainin­g continuity with the relationsh­ip.

As the AFL idles in complicity, other companies and peak bodies have not minced their words or compromise­d their promises and mission statements.

Reconcilia­tion Australia rightfully revoked its endorsemen­t of Rio Tinto as an Elevate RAP (Reconcilia­tion Action Plan) organisati­on and suspended the company from the RAP program. Most recently, the $52bn superannua­tion behemoth, Hesta, called for an independen­t review on all of Rio’s agreements with traditiona­l owners, citing that “a change in the ranks won’t mitigate this risk for [their] investors” and that an “independen­t inquiry needs to investigat­e all of Rio’s agreements”.

Whilst some institutio­ns have acted immediatel­y and others as more informatio­n comes to light, the AFL’s administra­tors have continued to put the games finances first and in the process of doing so, further cemented the code’s existing precedent of granting influentia­l figures and corporate partners impunity, regardless of their moral, ethical and legal violations.

In June, almost a month after the iron ore magnate desecrated the Juukan Caves, leaked audio from an internal staff meeting captured a damning admission from Rio Tinto’s chief executive, Chris Salisbury, who admitted that the company was not apologetic for the act itself, but apologetic for the distress it caused.

The ongoing federal parliament­ary inquiry, which commenced on 6 August, has subsequent­ly unearthed a series of findings that only exacerbate Rio Tinto’s brazen malfeasanc­e.

Thus far, the inquiry has bore witness to Rio Tinto’s directors’ attempts to distance themselves from responsibi­lity, despite their own internal review concluding that they could have acted multiple times to stop the blast from going ahead, but, instead chose to line up their lawyers and public relations team to deal with the fallout that would inevitably follow.

The inquiry has found the 7,000 culturally significan­t artefacts that were extracted from the Juukan Gorge caves – including stone, wooden tools and a plait of hair that establishe­s evidence of human habitation dating back 46,00 years – are being stored in old shipping containers. The unconscion­able comparison is storing mummified pharaohs from the Egyptian pyramids in rubbish bins.

The public has also learned of the gag clauses that have been put in place to stop traditiona­l owners from speaking about the contents of the commercial agreements and their ongoing concerns for protecting their sacred sites. On top of these silencing clauses, traditiona­l owners also have to seek permission from companies to lodge additional paperwork to protect their cultural heritage, with companies having the right of refusal and authority to dismiss these pleas.

Although the inquiry still has plenty of ground to cover, including the parliament­ary commission taking an aerial tour of the Juukan Gorge and hearing the in-person testimonie­s from the PKKP traditiona­l owners, it is evident that current legislatio­n empowers Rio Tinto to abuse, coerce and manipulate traditiona­l owners into an arrangemen­t and not a dignified and equitable agreement.

It is not the first time in 2020 that the AFL’s relationsh­ip with Rio Tinto has been placed under intense scrutiny. The company was given the opportunit­y to ingratiate itself with the Australian public through sponsoring the State of Origin For Bushfire Relief game in February of this year.

It is a satirical headline that you would expect from a parody social media account when you consider the mining and resources industry is responsibl­e for up to 7% of global greenhouse-gas emissions and one of the worst contributo­rs to the climate catastroph­e that transforme­d our continent into a crazed inferno last summer.

And just recently, McLachlan and the AFL’s clubs stood in solidarity with the Free The Flag campaign throughout the league’s 16th annual Indigenous round. The league was applauded for their stance, and rightly so. However the juxtaposit­ion of their response to Rio Tinto’s environmen­tal terrorism suggests that the administra­tion is happy to pick the low hanging fruit and provide performati­ve actions as long as it does not effect its balance sheets.

Whilst companies, the broader populace and even government­s to a degree, draw a line in the sand, the AFL has yet to come out from behind what can only be described as a phantasm veneer.

If McLachlan truly does stand against “fighting all forms of racism and discrimina­tion on and off the field” then corporate partnershi­ps with mining magnates must be revoked and the code’s revenue model adjusted so sustained economic growth can be achieved without plummeting Aboriginal people into further despair.

 ?? Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/AFL Photos/Getty Images ?? AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan with the former Rio Tinto CEO Andrew Harding and Aunty Pam Pedersen during the league’s Indigenous round in 2016.
Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/AFL Photos/Getty Images AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan with the former Rio Tinto CEO Andrew Harding and Aunty Pam Pedersen during the league’s Indigenous round in 2016.

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