Aboriginal group seeks $1.1 billion from Western Australia in iron ore claim

An Aboriginal group is seeking A$1.8 billion ($1.1 billion) from Western Australia in compensation after the state government allowed Fortescue to mine for iron ore without a land use deal, court filings showed on Wednesday.
The Yindjibarndi Ngurra Aboriginal Corporation (YNAC) says activity at the Solomon mining hub has damaged its land and people. Its claim includes A$1 billion for cultural damage and A$678 million for economic loss, filings to the Federal Court of Australia showed.
The case is set to be a landmark not only for the amount of compensation claimed but also because any precedent could open the door to other claims for past damage.
The YNAC is suing the state because it authorized the mining. The state is then expected to try and recoup losses by suing Fortescue, the world’s fourth biggest miner of iron ore.
“Fortescue accepts that the Yindjibarndi People are entitled to compensation, however the parties disagree on the amount of that compensation,” Fortescue said in a statement to Reuters.
In its final submission to the court, the state government said the total compensation for economic loss should be A$128,114 plus interest of A$92,957. And the award for cultural loss should be in the range of A$5 million to A$10 million, the state argued, saying that would “appropriately reflect what the Australian community would accept as fair, reasonable or just.”
The Western Australian government department overseeing Aboriginal heritage said it was unable to comment because the matter was before the courts. YNAC declined to make additional comment.
The court is hearing arguments this week with a decision not expected until late this year.
Western Australia accounts for around half of the world’s sea borne supply of the steelmaking ingredient.
In 2020, the destruction of the culturally and historically important Juukan Gorge rock shelters in the Pilbara region by Rio Tinto triggered a global outcry and the departure of its CEO and chairman.
Experts quoted in the filings say the Solomon mine has caused existential damage to the Yindjibarndi people, by destroying aspects of their land and culture.
The mine has damaged more than 285 significant archaeological sites and six Dreaming or creation story tracks that form part of Australia’s understanding of human settlement in its arid regions around 40,000-45,000 years ago, the report said.
“The significant harm to country, people and Dreamings remains ongoing,” the report said.
The Yindjibarndi group in 2017 won exclusive native title rights over land covering the Solomon mining hub, a vast mineral-rich project that started in 2012 and is capable of yielding up to 80 million tonnes of iron ore a year. Native title is a legal doctrine in Australia that recognizes Indigenous rights to certain parcels of land.
Fortescue’s founder Andrew Forrest is one of Australia’s wealthiest people. The company logged net profit after tax of $5.7 billion last financial year.
($1 = 1.5760 Australian dollars)
(By Melanie Burton; Editing by Kate Mayberry and Sonali Paul)
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7 Comments
Huw Robert Grossmith
How will money fix their issue. In my experience AF has always helped Aboriginal people. If FMG played divide and conquer that’s because Aboriginal communities do that to each other, the proof The Voice referendum many for and almost as many against. The divide, happening since Mabo and land rights does nothing but keep lawyers in money!
Keith McGregor
This is a joke
They have gone too far and the country needs to put a stop to them
This land was once one continent joining every other land mass in the world how far back do they want to go only far enough that they get more money to waste
What a joke
Hans
I personally think that this land belongs to everyone even when the First Nation people lived there for centuries before the British people came to Australia we all living in WA from the mining industry stop asking us for money we all pay our taxes maybe you should get a job so we all can have a good life together
Ravi
You don’t seem to understand. It is about native land title. Let me explain in the language you understand. If you have a title to farmland and someone comes and starts digging you are entitled to compensation😀
Graham
This rubbish has to stop ! this has nothing to do with cultural significance or any other thing except a cash grab. There is enough evidence around of the hundreds of thousands of dollars that indigenous peoples get every few months if they are part of the various Clans and this is happening across Australia. Plus more and more areas are being cut off from the Australian people to visit
Howard Green
Sounds like another land and money grab by those people in the Wanabe tribe to me. So long as there is money to be made, someone, somewhere will scream indigenous cultural heritage.
It is 40 thousand years or 65 thousand years that the current mob have been here? We all seem to have a short memory and noone can agree, not even they can. Remember the little people, they where here before so maybe they need a voice.
Jeff
Will the money be evenly dispersed among all the first nations people of wa.in that event will all there government pensions etcetera be revoked as all would be well above asset tests