The Guardian Australia

NT government and Glencore mine accused of misusing millions meant for Indigenous owners

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The Northern Territory government and a massive lead and zinc mine have been accused of misusing millions of dollars set aside for the benefit of traditiona­l owners.

Glencore’s McArthur River Mine set up the $32m community benefits trust in 2007 as a condition of expanding its operation, about 750km south-east of Darwin.

The fund was supposed to help people in the remote Borroloola region, which has a population of about 1,200, 76% of whom are Aboriginal, with an average age of 22 years.

But it has mostly been used to pay for government infrastruc­ture projects and a mine jobs program, Australian National University anthropolo­gist Sean Kerins said.

The mine and the NT government disagree, saying the trust has made major investment­s in long-term community programs in the Gulf Region in areas like health, education, economic developmen­t and culture.

Kerins refutes this, saying the CBT has been “used as a cash cow by the mine and the NT government, who are the biggest beneficiar­ies”.

“The trust claims to have spent $15m on over 100 projects that have changed lives in the region but there’s little evidence of long-term sustainabl­e community benefits,” he said.

More than one million dollars was used to upgrade a bridge on a public road that should have been paid for by government, Kerins said.

The trust is also funding MRM’s employment program but that benefits few local Aboriginal people.

“They’re dipping into the CBT because it’s so easy to do so,” he said.

Kerins believes much of the problem goes back to how the trust was set up, with traditiona­l owners shut out of negotiatio­ns and the NT government and MRM deciding how the trust would operate.

“The mine refused to meet with Aboriginal groups who wanted to organise under their law,” he said. “Instead they parachuted in someone MRM chose and set up a proxy organisati­on with mine-links that didn’t represent the people.”

Garawa elder and Borroloola Aboriginal leader Jack Green said the trust should be handed over to the four Aboriginal groups in the region to decide how it’s used.

“That money was for community benefit,” he told the Juukan Gorge inquiry into the destructio­n of 46,000year-old caves in Western Australia, which is also looking into MRM.

“Community benefit means Aboriginal people or non-Aboriginal people. We’re supposed to benefit fairly.”

Green also alleges the trust “knocked back” most Aboriginal funding applicatio­ns.

“At the moment we’re just being given a bit of scrap money. It wouldn’t be enough to buy me a teabag.”

He argues the money should be used to build Aboriginal housing and fix roads in the communitie­s.

“In some of the potholes there you can bury a Toyota,” he said.

Brisbane-based trust manager Plan C director Jim Gleeson said he was surprised by the allegation­s.

“The trust is not being dictated by a Glencore or NT government representa­tive at all,” he said. “It’s been very

successful and highly valued by the community.”

Gleeson said the trust’s project officers had a good connection with the community and the local directors were highly engaged.

In a statement, the NT government and trust directors said the CBT was governed by an independen­t board with nine members.

Five of them are residents of the region and represent the interests of the Gudanji, Garrwa, Yanyuwa and Marra people and the broader community.

All decisions about investment­s and the distributi­on of trust funds are made by the board.

“The government is satisfied significan­t CBT funds are being allocated to community programs for the NT Gulf region and these have resulted in significan­t benefits across areas including education, health and culture,” according to a spokesman.

Keirns also raised questions about the board’s Aboriginal members, saying they weren’t “freely chosen” by the community.

Mawurli and Wirriwangk­uma Aboriginal Corporatio­n, which assists the trust’s four Aboriginal board members, said the men were involved in all decisions about funds allocation.

They stand up for their people and culture, coordinato­r Andrew Firley said.

According to Gleeson, the recently funded projects include a bus service, a community festival, a local football team, a youth music program, cultural documentat­ion and a school breakfast program.

He said $3.5m of trust funds were allocated between 2018 and 2020.

During the trust developmen­t, the NT Environmen­tal Protection Authority was critical of MRM’s consultati­on process and structure, saying it was a conflict of interest and lacked transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

A KPMG report on the CBT in 2015 was also damming, saying the executive roles lacked clarity.

It asserted there were no methods for measuring project effectiven­ess, that women and young people were excluded and that community consultati­on was poor.

The report found the NT government and MRM should not be freely accessing trust funding.

Gleeson said many of the recommenda­tions have been or are in the process of being implemente­d.

 ??  ?? Garawa elder Jack Green (right) and Gudanji woman Josie Davey Green believe Glencore’s McArthur River Mine trust fund should be handed over to Aboriginal groups.
Garawa elder Jack Green (right) and Gudanji woman Josie Davey Green believe Glencore’s McArthur River Mine trust fund should be handed over to Aboriginal groups.

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