
The Wunna Nyiyaparli people of Western Australia鈥檚 eastern Pilbara region are being shafted by the federal government to placate mining interests. a UN Human Rights Committee (CCPR) order in mid-2023 to provide them with 鈥渁n effective and enforceable remedy鈥.
Wunna Nyiyaparli elder Ailsa Roy began the process of challenging the legitimacy of mining operations on Country, via the National Native Title Tribunal (NNTT) in 2012, which led to a Federal Court hearing in 2016. That found that the Wunna Nyiyaparli have no native title claim, as they are not a people separate from the broader Nyiyaparli language group, despite evidence to the contrary.
The Wunna Nyiyaparli continue to live largely in accordance with their traditional laws: their culture is inextricably linked to Country. Their ability to live, hunt and fish on Country is essential to their preservation as a people.
Yet, mining corporations have blocked the Wunna Nyiyaparli access to Country; they are being threatened with trespass.
As Wunna Nyiyaparli ways of being have been intimately linked to for tens of thousands of years, breaking this relationship threatens the very existence of the Wunna Nyiyaparli people.
Roy is continuing to campaign for her people鈥檚 rights, 20 months since the CCPR provided the Australian Attorney General鈥檚 Department with 180 days to rectify the situation. She stresses that her people have been 鈥渄efrauded and denied justice鈥 in respect of their 鈥渆conomic base鈥, and all the chief lawmaker has done is write to the UN to deny the validity of its findings.
Mining interests favoured
鈥淚rrespective of the Australian Attorney General鈥檚 response to the United Nations, the Wunna Nyiyaparli people have rights,鈥 . 鈥淲e have a history and we remain an oppressed people denied our land base and self-determination.鈥
鈥淭he United Nations complaint did not have any impact on Australia,鈥 Roy added. 鈥淎ustralia cannot change what they don鈥檛 acknowledge.鈥
The CCPR聽, that Australia must 鈥減rovide an effective and enforceable remedy鈥 within 180 days, or it would, as it is now, be in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
The government was encouraged to disseminate the news of this decision, which it failed to do.
Gina Rinehart鈥檚 Hancock Prospecting聽runs the , while Andrew 鈥淭wiggy鈥 Forrest鈥檚 Fortescue Metals Group operates the Christmas Creek and Cloudbreak mines on the larger claim of the Nyiyaparli people.
These lands are rich in iron ore and Rinehart鈥檚 Roy Hill mine聽almost financial year.
鈥淔ortescue and Hancock failed to negotiate with certainty the right people for right country, which makes mining on our sovereign land illegal, as it is against the law to profit from聽聽property,鈥 Roy said.
The Wunna Nyiyaparli native title claim was lodged with the NNTT in 2012. It sits within the broader 1998 native title claim of the Nyiyaparli people.
Roy made the claim to prevent further mining on her people鈥檚 land, which successfully passed the registration test, as it was recognised to be in accordance with Western Desert traditional laws and custom.
Yet, two Indigenous land use agreements, lodged with the NNTT six months after the Wunna Nyiyaparli claim was lodged, disputed the latter鈥檚 legitimacy. The Federal Court determined in 2015 it would consider the two claims alongside each other.
The court also decided it would deliberate on a second question: whether the Wunna Nyiyaparli are really Nyiyaparli people.
The Wunna Nyiyaparli did not give consent and told their legal representative. But not long afterwards, the Wunna Nyiyaparli鈥檚 original lawyer withdrew their services.
Three unrepresented Wunna Nyiyaparli people then showed up to Federal Court on July 11, 2016, expecting to argue their native title claim, even though the court was set to consider the heritage question as the court鈥檚 communications with the Wunna Nyiyaparli had broken down.
The Wunna Nyiyaparli representatives mistakenly turned up prepared to argue their claim and not the question of heritage, which the court was determining.
Justice Richard White decided to proceed, finding the question in the negative. This voided the Wunna Nyiyaparli native title claim, as their three representatives looked on, denied the right participate.
鈥淭he Wunna Nyiyaparli people are denied justice. Our mob are denied compensation for loss and damages,鈥 Roy said.
鈥淯nder聽section 10 of the , it is illegal to sign for someone else鈥檚 property and it is also embedded in Aboriginal culture.鈥
Justice denied
Roy said their lawyer Scott Calnan is seeking support to make this matter an international concern.
鈥淎s an occupying government, Australia is in denial of their own human right failings and genocide.
鈥淲e are still fighting for our recognition and our rights,鈥 Roy said. 鈥淲e are putting our case together to prove our grandfather鈥檚 legacy and history remains intact. We will be seeking justice, in light of the聽,鈥 a reference to the Traditional owners, who were recently successful in seeking compensation over bauxite mining of their land in the Gove peninsula.聽
Roy points to the Wunna Nyiyaparli link to Country, prior to colonisation and through William Coffin鈥檚 lineage. She has legal and anthropological documentation setting out her people鈥檚 connection and ability to 鈥渟peak for鈥 the land, via her grandfather William Coffin.
However, this was all excluded from court proceedings because the Wunna Nyiyaparli were left unrepresented, unprepared and unable to have their day in court.
The UN Human Rights Committee鈥檚聽 in response to the April 2, 2019, Wunna Nyiyaparli complaint聽gave the Australian government 180 days to provide a remedy. It should have allowed the Wunna Nyiyaparli their rightful day in court, where they could be represented and prepared to argue their rightful claim to their own land.
Fight for Country continues
鈥淭he Wunna Nyiyaparli people were recognised as having exclusive rights over the Roy Hill area and never signed away those rights,鈥 Roy said. 鈥淲e have been prevented from accessing Country 鈥 while watching others get rich from our land.鈥
鈥淲e have been subjected to an exhaustive and humiliating legal process. Our sovereign rights predate Native Title, but the Wunna Nyiyaparli are unable to camp, fish and carry out cultural business on Country, nor can we grant leases, licenses or borrow any money against our lands.鈥
Roy said the inconsistencies between the state-based Torrens title land tenure systems and the national native title system is a key reason why the Wunna Nyiyaparli are being blocked from being able to develop their own Country. She said the relative weakness of the Native Title Act 1993 meant that her people鈥檚 position had been 鈥渟everely diminished鈥.
聽鈥淲e feel cheated, defrauded, disappointed, disgusted, denied, disrespected, demoralised, disenfranchised and discarded,鈥 Roy said.
[Paul Gregoire聽writes for聽,聽where this article was first published.]