Sorry: Rio Tinto apologises for blowing up Aboriginal site

Mining giant says it will review plans for expansion in part of Western Australia that is sacred to traditional owners.

Rio Tinto in Western Australia
The miner said that it had performed archaeological work in 2014 to preserve significant cultural heritage artefacts, recovering approximately 7,000 objects [File: David Gray/Reuters]

Mining giant Rio Tinto has apologised for the destruction of a sacred Aboriginal cave in Western Australia that showed evidence of continual habitation dating back 46,000 years, saying it would urgently review its plans for other sites in the area.

Last week, the company blew up the cave in Juukan Gorge, about 1,075km (667 miles) north of Perth, as part of an expansion programme in the Pilbara iron ore region, provoking an outcry and calls for reform of heritage protection laws.

Explosives destroyed two ancient rock shelters, where artefacts discovered included 4,000-year-old plaited human hair with genetic links to the present-day traditional owners, the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura (PKKP) people.

“That site, for us, that’s where our ancestors were occupying their traditional land,” PKKP director Burchell Hayes told Australian Broadcasting Corp, adding that the community felt sorrow and sadness over the loss of heritage.

Rio Tinto, which had been granted state government approval in 2013 to damage or destroy the site under a legal framework that is currently under review, apologised on Sunday.

“We pay our respects to the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura people, and we are sorry for the distress we have caused,” Iron Ore chief executive Chris Salisbury said in a statement.

The miner said that it had performed archaeological work in 2014 to preserve significant cultural heritage artefacts, recovering approximately 7,000 objects.

Rio said that it would work with traditional owners to look at its approach to preserving heritage.

“As a matter of urgency, we are reviewing the plans of all other sites in the Juukan Gorge area,” Salisbury said.

Federal Indigenous Affairs Minister Ken Wyatt last week flagged a need to strengthen the protection of Indigenous sites, while his state counterpart said Western Australia was moving to fix out-of-date legislation.

Source: Reuters