Extract from The Guardian
Wangan and Jagalingou
people say judge should have found company ‘misled’ tribunal over
jobs and economic impact of mine
Adrian Burragubba of the Wangan and Jagalingou
people (left) said the decision to issue Adani mining leases ‘took
away our right to free, prior and informed consent’. Photograph:
Dan Peled/AAP
Thursday
8 September 2016 13.57 AEST
A
traditional owner of the site of Adani’s proposed Carmichael mine
has vowed to keep fighting the project as he lodged an appeal from a
federal court ruling that endorsed the state government’s approval
of the mining leases.
Adrian
Burragubba, who speaks on behalf of members of the Wangan and
Jagalingou people, who oppose the mine, lodged an appeal to the full
bench of the court on Thursday.
It
challenges a decision by Justice John Reeves last month, arguing in
part that he should have found Adani “misled” the national Native
Title Tribunal in its evidence on jobs and economic benefits created
by the mine.
Burragubba
said the tribunal’s decision
in April 2015 to allow the Queensland government to go ahead
and issue Adani’s mining leases “took away our right to free,
prior and informed consent”.
“It
effectively allowed the Queensland government
to override the decision that we made nearly two years ago to reject
Adani’s ‘deal’,” he said.
“We
said ‘no means no’ and so we will continue to resist this
damaging coal mine that will tear the heart out of our country. The
stakes are huge. In the spirit of our ancestors, we will continue to
fight for justice until the project falls over.”
The
Wangan and Jagalingou people are divided on the question of the mine,
with Burragubba and an anti-Adani group that includes Australia’s
first Indigenous senior counsel, Tony McAvoy, disputing the claim by
a pro-Adani faction that the majority now support the project.
Burragubba’s
lawyer, Benedict Coyne, said his client mounted the appeal “on
strong public interest grounds and in the context of numerous other
legal avenues he is pursuing for justice for his people, both
domestically and internationally”.
“The
case raises very important issues for indigenous and non-indigenous
Australians in the context of the native title system and Indigenous
people’s rights,” Coyne said.
“There
are important legal principles and principles of human rights and
justice at stake.”
The
federal court appeal – to be run pro bono by Sydney senior counsel
Craig Leggatt and other barristers – comes after the court last
week dismissed
a challenge by the Australia Conservation Foundation to
commonwealth environmental approval of the mine.
That
case prompted complaints again by Adani and its industry lobby group,
the Queensland Resources Council, that the company has been mired in
legal challenges as part of a broader anti-mining activist campaign.
Burragubba’s
appeal will run alongside a separate supreme court challenge to the
state mining leases by Burragubba and other traditional owners.
That
case is due to be heard in November.
Burragubba
has also flagged further legal actions underway under Native Title
laws, saying the Wangan and Jagalingou opponents would “use all
appropriate means to stop the destruction of our country and
culture”.
“We
will not be talked down to by industry or government and their
lackeys, and we will challenge any decision that threatens our life,
culture and traditions and the social, cultural and economic
structures of our group,” he said.
“We
are traditional owners who assert our right to self-determination and
a future without dependency on mining.”
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