BBC News, 2
August 2013
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| The mining company was accused of causing the collapse of part of the site |
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A mining
company has been convicted of desecrating an Aboriginal site in Australia's
Northern Territory.
Mining firm
OM Manganese was found guilty on Friday - the first time a company has been
successfully prosecuted in Australia for desecration of a sacred site.
The site is
known as Two Women Sitting Down and is at Bootu Creek, north of Tennant Creek.
OM
Manganese was fined A$150,000 ($134,000; £88,000).
Peter Toth,
CEO of OM Holdings, which owns OM Manganese, said: "The company never
intended to harm, damage or disrespect the sacred site."
"We
sincerely regret the damage and the hurt caused and I unreservedly apologise to
the site's custodians and traditional owners," he said.
'Dreaming
story'
Two Women
Sitting Down is associated with Australia's Kunapa people.
OM
Manganese was accused of causing the collapse of part of the site, including a
distinctive rocky outcrop known as the Horse's Head, in July 2011.
Prosecutors
told the Darwin Magistrates Court that the company performed explosive blasting
close to the site to break up ground, Australian broadcaster ABC reported.
The company
was permitted to mine in the area, but was advised to steer clear of sacred
sites, and was warned in early 2011 that cracks were appearing in rocks at the
Bootu Creek site, the broadcaster said.
Dr Ben
Scambary, chief executive officer of the Aboriginal Areas Protection Authority,
said that the site was of great significance to Australia's indigenous people.
"This
site... relates to a dreaming story about a marsupial rat and a bandicoot who
had a fight over bush tucker [native Australian bush food]," he said.
"As
the creation ancestors fought, their blood spilled out, turning the rock a
dark-red colour that is now associated with manganese."
Kunapa
community representative Gina Smith said: "It will always remain a sacred
site to us, but it has been ruined and we don't know what to do because this
has never happened to the old people.
"It
has been there for thousands of years as part of our culture and our
story."
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