Parliamentary committee finds that Kimba nuclear waste dump law may breach Indigenous human rights
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Kimba nuclear waste dump law risks breaching Indigenous human rights, committee finds https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04-16/risk-kimba-nuclear-dump-may-breach-human-rights-committee-says/12154474 ABC North and West SA By Gabriella Marchant 17 Apr 20, A cross-party parliamentary committee has found “significant risk” that local Indigenous groups were not consulted about a proposed nuclear waste facility to a standard required under international law.
Key points:
A report by the Joint Committee on Human Rights found that given Barngarla traditional owners unanimously vetoed the proposed facility, the Federal Government’s decision to press ahead with a bill to build it risked breaching Barngarla rights to culture and self-determination. The proposed site outside Kimba on South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula is on land traditionally associated with the Barngarla people and would store Australia’s low to medium-level radioactive waste, most of which is created by nuclear medicine. Two non-binding independent ballots were conducted to gauge community support for the proposal; one for residents in the local government area surrounding the site, the other among Barngarla Determination Aboriginal Corporation members, who largely did not qualify for the first ballot. While more than 60 per cent of voters in the Kimba local government ballot supported the facility, 100 per cent of Barngarla voters rejected the proposal. Rights ‘may not be sufficiently protected’The committee found the site’s nomination seemed to “rest heavily on the local council ballot from which native title holders were excluded, which the Minister uses as evidence of local community support”.
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