Rio played down Australian heritage damage at inquiry - Aboriginal group
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[September 09, 2021]
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - An executive
with mining company Rio Tinto has played down damage to Indigenous
Australian heritage, an Aboriginal group said on Thursday, in a
submission to an inquiry into widespread destruction of sites of
cultural significance.
A spokesman for Rio Tinto said the company declined to comment.
News emerged this year that Rio forerunner Hamersley Iron failed to
protect artefacts belonging to the Wintawari Guruma Aboriginal
Corporation (WGAC) that had been salvaged from its Marandoo iron ore
project including 18,000-year-old evidence showing how people lived
during the last Ice Age.
Those and other artefacts were thrown in a Darwin rubbish heap.
The group's complaint centres on a statement by Rio's head of Indigenous
Affairs, Brad Welsh, who last month told the Juukan Gorge Inquiry: "We
have not identified any evidence that Rio Tinto directed any disposal of
artefacts," according to the submission.
The group said such comments showed Rio's "continued lack of regard and
respect for Eastern Guruma cultural heritage".
"The comments clearly sought to downplay importance of the cultural
material disposed and lessen Rio’s involvement and responsibility for
what occurred," the group said in its submission.
Rio Tinto operates six of its 16 mines and three rail lines on the
group's traditional lands.
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Aboriginal groups' members carrying a banner march to protest
against what they say is a lack of detail and consultation on new
heritage protection laws, after the Rio Tinto mining group destroyed
ancient rock shelters for an iron ore mine last year, in Perth,
Australia August 19, 2021. Courtesy
Last year, Rio Tinto triggered a public outcry with
the destruction of rock shelters in Western Australia that showed
human habitation dating back 46,000 years, during iron ore mining
operations.
Welsh told the inquiry that the world's biggest iron ore miner had
not been able to put together a "complete picture" of the potential
cultural or archaeological value of what was discarded, given the
passage of time, and without knowing if its records were complete.
"However, we do recognise that decisions made on the management of
these materials may not have adequately considered archaeological
and cultural values in the analysis completed," he said, adding that
current standards of analysis would be more comprehensive.
(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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