Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation MEDIA STATEMENT
23 November 2011
http://yindjibarndi.org.au/
The Yindjibarndi People have been battling for 4 years against an increasingly belligerent, litigious, and unscrupulous Fortescue Metals Group (FMG).
On 28 October, at FMGâs Solomon Project in the Pilbara, the Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation (YAC) discovered that FMG had desecrated an ochre quarry and destroyed part of a creek where sacred Gandi are found (stones used in initiation rituals).
The WA Department of Indigenous Affairs (DIA) and the Aboriginal Cultural Materials Committee (ACMC) were informed of these sites, but no action to halt or mitigate this
damage has been taken.
That such damage can occur when YAC has previously provided the DIA with information regarding these sites, is proof positive of the DIA's inability to effectively monitor or enforce the State's heritage protection regime, or stop FMG from desecrating and destroying highly significant heritage and religious sites.
The Yindjibarndi People have appealed to the Hon. Tony Burke (Minister for Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities) to use his power under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act to make an emergency declaration to stop FMG doing more irretrievable damage.
âThe tragedy is that every moment spent waiting for Mr Burke to act, means more destruction, more knowledge lost,â said Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation CEO, Michael Woodley.
LINK - application for emergency declaration http://tiny.cc/j9qyf
Fresh FMG legal threats against the WA Registrar of Aboriginal Sites, Kathryn Przywolnik, and a deepening crisis surrounding protection of Yindjibarndi heritage from FMG operations, makes Federal intervention more urgent than ever.
Registrar Przywolnik recently informed FMG that its latest section 18 Notice seeking ministerial consent to impact on Yindjibarndi heritage sites is âinadequateâ, legally unsafe and should be withdrawn. The Registrarâs decision expresses no confidence in the heritage reporting of FMG in the strongest of terms, and
confirms the grave doubts and objections consistently expressed by the YAC.
LINK - Przywolnik/Maher letters http://tiny.cc/nafok
In particular, Ms Przywolnik advised FMG that the ACMC would find it difficult to make recommendations or assess heritage values in the absence of cultural knowledge from relevant Traditional Owners, and that any ACMC recommendations made without inclusion of such knowledge risked the destruction of sites.
On 11 November, FMG Heritage Manager, Lisa Maher, responded: âIt is highly inappropriate for a decisionmaking body to recommend that an applicant withdraw an initiating notice [âŚ] In my view, the reasons referred to in your letter
are insufficient to affect the validity of the Notice. However, if you retain your view after receiving this letter, please advise me immediately and I will take the appropriate action. I foreshadow such action may include prerogative relief.â
There is no guarantee that any caution issued by the Registrar will stop FMG from doing more damage. The last time the Registrar criticised an FMG section 18 application, FMG simply edited out unfavourable parts and resubmitted, and was duly given conditional consent by the Minister. Neither the Ministerâs conditions or provisions of the WA Aboriginal Heritage Act (AHA) have stopped FMG from launching into a destructive blasting program and mine development program in Yindjibarndi country.
In their application to Minister Burke, YAC have drawn attention to the 5 November letter from Eureka Heritage to the Registrar informing that FMG demanded the removal of critical parts of a heritage report submitted to the DIA in support of an FMG section 18 application.
LINK - Eureka Heritage letter to Registrar http://tiny.cc/43vxs
This report found that information provided by members of the âbreakawayâ Wirlu-murra group (WMYAC) â a faction compliant to FMG â was âsketchy, lacking in specificity and far from comprehensiveâ; that âmembers possessed limited skills in the identification of archaeological resourcesâ, and a âlack of cultural
knowledge of traditional life in the Firetail area.â (Firetail is an area within the Solomon Project.)
Eureka Heritage said that FMG threatened to withhold payment of due invoices if the critical section was not removed, and then falsely justified the removal of this section by reason that it was not written by a suitably qualified heritage professional.
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YAC have asked the Hon. Tony Burke to stop FMG bulldozing and blasting so as to allow the safe execution of comprehensive and independent ethnographic and archaeological field surveys to record the precise locations of Yindjibarndi sites and objects in the disturbance area so they can be properly protected. These
surveys are scheduled to commence in early December 2011.
âWe have been flooded with offers from archaeologists and anthropologists around Australia volunteering their time to work with us on worldâs best practice heritage surveys.â said Mr Woodley. âMany of these people are motivated by a wish to rescue the reputation of their professions, which has been damaged by the behaviour of FMG, and by evidence of mining company sabotage of consultantsâ independence.â
YAC have also informed the Minister that, in its dealings over a land access agreement, which will affect the entire Yindjibarndi people and all their country for the unlimited life of the âagreementâ, FMG have deliberately sidelined YAC â the chosen representative, declared Prescribed Body Corporate and native title trustee of the Yindjibarndi People; and the officially appointed Agent for the Yindjibarndi #1 Claim, which underlays FMGâs Solomon Project. Instead FMG has set out to divide and conquer the Yindjibarndi community by disseminating false information and being duplicitous in their negotiations.
FMG has financed all the administrative and legal costs of the rogue WMYAC faction for the purpose of removing YAC and substituting the majority of Yindjibarndi #1 applicants, and has offered them inducements including a payment of $500,000 within 14 days of the execution of the Agreement, and a $3 million annual cash payment, despite the fact that this group has no statutory right or authority to negotiate
such agreement.
Mr Woodley said that FMGâs threat to sue the Registrar, and their backing of vexatious litigation against the Yindjibarndi Aboriginal Corporation would not stop the Yindjibarndi fight for justice. âIf FMG think the law is just for the rich, and they can break us with lawyers and bullying, they should think again. The
Yindjibarndi people may be one of the poorest groups in the Australia, but by staying strong we stand to gain everything that is most precious. Our country and culture is our life and our future. By lying down for FMG we have a whole world to lose.â
CONTACT: Michael Woodley 0419 097 130 mwoodley@juluwarlu.com.au
Phil Davies â Anthropologist/Public Officer â 0429 110 451 pdavies@juluwarlu.com.au
To view video, photos & research materials please visit: www.yindjibarndi.org.au
For media materials please contact: media@juluwarlu.com.au