Australian probe favours national laws to protect Aboriginal heritage
MELBOURNE: Australia should set out a new national legal framework to protect Aboriginal cultural heritage, an inquiry into the destruction of ancient rock shelters for an iron ore mine found in its final report on Monday.
The report said Aboriginal traditional owners should be the top decision makers on development applications that could impact their heritage and have the power to withhold consent and to take civil action to enforce proposed new laws.
The recommendations followed a 16-month parliamentary inquiry into how Rio Tinto Ltd last year legally destroyed the sites at Juukan Gorge, Western Australia, that showed evidence of human habitation over 46,000 years, from the last Ice Age.
Widespread anger at the destruction of the caves put a focus on industry practices and cost the jobs of Rio’s then-chief executive and two other senior leaders and led Chairman Simon Thompson to flag he would step down in 2022.
The committee, which recommended in December that Rio should pay restitution to the traditional owners, on Monday set out recommendations for reform of a patchwork of state and federal laws with differing definitions and processes, all of which it found contained “serious deficiencies”.
“It became apparent to the Committee that legislation designed to protect cultural heritage has, in many cases, directly contributed to damage and destruction,” the report said. Rio Tinto said in a statement it welcomed the findings.
“We are focused on improving our engagement with Indigenous Peoples and our host communities to better understand their priorities and concerns, minimise our impacts, and responsibly manage Indigenous cultural heritage,” the company said.